“…In whole raw garlic, the enzyme alliinase is localised in vacuoles, separated from its substrate alliin; therefore when garlic is damaged (i.e. contaminated by microbes, mechanically disrupted, ground) and the vacuoles are disrupted, alliinase is released and rapidly hydrolyses alliin to produce allicin which is responsible for the unpleasant flavour and odour of the garlic cloves (Bae et al, 2014;Ovesná, Mitrová & Kučera, 2015;Rana, Pal, Vaiphei, Sharma & Ola, 2011). However, when garlic is subjected to heat treatment above 60 °C, alliinase is inactivated and allicin production decreases; in parallel, alliin and allicin suffer thermal degradation (Chen, Xu, Wang, Zhou, Fan, & Huang, 2017;Lawson, Wang & Papadimitriou, 2001).…”