New Bitter-Masking Compounds: Hydroxylated Benzoic Acid Amides of Aromatic Amines as Structural Analogues of Homoeriodictyol
Jakob P. Ley, Maria Blings, Susanne Paetz, Gerhard Krammer, Heinz‐Jürgen Bertram
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract
Starting from the known bitter-masking flavanones eriodictyol and homoeriodictyol from herba santa some structurally related hydroxybenzoic acid amides of benzylamines were synthesized and evaluated as masking agents toward bitterness of caffeine by sensory methods. The closest structural relatives of homoeriodictyol, the hydroxybenzoic acid vanillylamides 5-9, were the most active and were able to reduce the bitterness of a 500 mg L(-1) caffeine solution by about 30% at a concentration of 100 mg L(-1). 2,4-Dihydroxybenzoic acid vanillylamide 7 showed a clear dose-dependent activity as inhibitor of the bitter taste of caffein between 5 and 500 mg L(-1). Additionally, it was possible to reduce the bitterness of quinine and salicine but not of the bitter peptide N-l-leucyl-l-tryptophan. Combinations of homoeriodictyol and amide 7 showed no synergistic or antagonistic changes in activity. The results for model compound 7 suggested that the hitherto unknown masking mechanism is probably the same for flavanones and the new amides. In the future, the new amides may be alternatives for the expensive flavanones to create flavor solutions to mask bitterness of pharmaceuticals or foodstuffs.
Extracted Claims
5 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
new amides may be alternatives for expensive flavanones
“In the future, the new amides may be alternatives for the expensive flavanones to create flavor solutions to mask bitterness of pharmaceuticals or foodstuffs.”
2,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid vanillylamide 7 reduce bitterness of caffeine
“2,4-Dihydroxybenzoic acid vanillylamide 7 showed a clear dose-dependent activity as inhibitor of the bitter taste of caffeine between 5 and 500 mg L(-1).”
2,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid vanillylamide 7 reduce bitterness of quinine and salicine
“Additionally, it was possible to reduce the bitterness of quinine and salicine but not of the bitter peptide N-l-leucyl-l-tryptophan.”