2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0308-8146(02)00159-0
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CLA content and fatty acid composition of Greek Feta and hard cheeses

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Cited by 99 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…As expected, the predominant FA of the LCSFA group was palmitic acid (C16:0) with its content in cheese fat ranging from 29.61 to 33.32 g/100g FA, with no significant differences shown between the two types of cheese (Tables 1 and 2). Similar values were found by Rutkowska et al (2009) and Prandini et al (2007) in, respectively, Italian and Polish 'hard' cheeses, whereas a lower content was determined in Greek cheeses including, for example, Feta-type cheese (18.3-28.0 g/100 g FA); however, these cheeses were made of sheep milk (Zlatanos et al, 2002).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…As expected, the predominant FA of the LCSFA group was palmitic acid (C16:0) with its content in cheese fat ranging from 29.61 to 33.32 g/100g FA, with no significant differences shown between the two types of cheese (Tables 1 and 2). Similar values were found by Rutkowska et al (2009) and Prandini et al (2007) in, respectively, Italian and Polish 'hard' cheeses, whereas a lower content was determined in Greek cheeses including, for example, Feta-type cheese (18.3-28.0 g/100 g FA); however, these cheeses were made of sheep milk (Zlatanos et al, 2002).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…A significantly lower fat content was determined only in one sample of Camembert-type cheese (C5) that had been labeled by the producer as a low-fat cheese (Figure 1). Fat content in the analyzed cheeses varied to a greater extent compared to that found in hard Italian ripening cheeses produced from cow's milk (27.43-31.62 g/100 g product) assayed by Prandini et al (2007) and was higher than in Feta-type Greek cheeses (17.9-20.9 g/100 g product) made of sheep or goat milk (Zlatanos et al, 2002). The differences were, however, due to the production technology and different type of milk used for cheese-making.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 71%
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“…The SFA and trans fatty acid contents of cheeses produced in 14 European countries were 60.74-68.99 % and 3.59-5.68 % respectively (Aro et al 1998). In another research related to fatty acid composition of Feta and Greek cheeses, the SFA of samples were found to be 68.9-74.1 %, MUFA values were 18.5-22.1 %; PUFA, cis and trans fatty acid contents of cheeses were found 3.8-4.8, 18.1-22.1 and 4.2-4.8 %, respectively (Zlatanos et al 2002). The SFA, MUFA and PUFA contents of in kashar cheese made from vegetable fat blends were found to be 46.63, 41.30 and 11.88 at the beginning of ripening period, respectively (Kesenkas et al 2009).…”
Section: Profile Of Fatty Acidsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Gürsoy et al (2003) showed that fresh Turkish hard cheese Kashar contained 0.61% CLA and 1.39% after ripening. The long aging Greek hard cheeses examined by Zlatanos et al (2002) contained more CLA than the shortly aging ones. Also Lobos-Ortega et al (2012) concluded that ripening has significant effects on the CLA content in cheeses made of cow's, ewe's, and goat's milks.…”
Section: Cla Concentrationmentioning
confidence: 93%