Total antioxidant capacity of spices, dried fruits, nuts, pulses, cereals and sweets consumed in Italy assessed by three different<i> in vitro</i> assays
Nicoletta Pellegrini, Mauro Serafini, Sara Salvatore, Daniele Del Rio, Marta Bianchi, Furio Brighenti
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
Abstract
With the aim to expand the Italian total antioxidant capacity (TAC) database, the TAC values of 11 spices, 5 dried fruits, 7 sweets, 18 cereal products, 5 pulses, and 6 nuts were determined using three different assays and considering the contribution of bound antioxidant compounds in fiber-rich foods (i. e. cereals, legumes, and nuts). Among spices, saffron displayed the highest antioxidant capacity, whereas among dried fruits, prune exhibited the highest value. The TAC values of all the chocolates analyzed were far higher than the other sweet extracts measured. Among cereal products, whole meal buckwheat and wheat bran had the greatest TAC. Among pulses and nuts, broad bean, lentil and walnuts had the highest antioxidant capacity, whereas chickpeas, pine nuts and peanuts were less effective. The contribution of bound phytochemicals to the overall TAC was relevant in cereals as well as in nuts and pulses. The complete TAC database could be utilized to properly investigate the role of dietary antioxidants in disease prevention.
Extracted Claims
7 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
broad bean, lentil and walnuts have highest antioxidant capacity among pulses and nuts
“broad bean, lentil and walnuts had the highest antioxidant capacity”
chocolates have far higher TAC than other sweet extracts
“The TAC values of all the chocolates analyzed were far higher than the other sweet extracts measured.”
bound phytochemicals contribute significantly to overall TAC in cereals, nuts, and pulses
“The contribution of bound phytochemicals to the overall TAC was relevant in cereals as well as in nuts and pulses.”