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Applications of Plant Bioactive Compounds as Replacers of Synthetic Additives in the Food Industry.

Gema Nieto MartínezLorena Martínez ZamoraRocío PeñalverFulgencio Marin-IniestaAmaury Taboada-RodríguezAntonio López-GómezGinés Benito Martínez-Hernández
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
According to the Codex Alimentarius, a food additive is any substance that is incorporated into a food solely for technological or organoleptic purposes during the production of that food. Food additives can be of synthetic or natural origin. Several scientific evidence (in vitro studies and epidemiological studies like the controversial Southampton study published in 2007) have pointed out that several synthetic additives may lead to health issues for consumers. In that sense, the actual consumer searches for "Clean Label" foods with ingredient lists clean of coded additives, which are rejected by the actual consumer, highlighting the need to distinguish synthetic and natural codded additives from the ingredient lists. However, this natural approach must focus on an integrated vision of the replacement of chemical substances from the food ingredients, food contact materials (packaging), and their application on the final product. Hence, natural plant alternatives are hereby presented, analyzing their potential success in replacing common synthetic emulsifiers, colorants, flavorings, inhibitors of quality-degrading enzymes, antimicrobials, and antioxidants. In addition, the need for a complete absence of chemical additive migration to the food is approached through the use of plant-origin bioactive compounds (e.g., plant essential oils) incorporated in active packaging.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • ionic liquid
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • systematic review
  • drinking water