“…Lipase is used widely to hydrolyze ester bonds in aqueous medium in several industries such as pharmacy, food, detergent, cosmetics, oleo-chemicals, fat-processing, leather, textiles and paper (Ozyilmaz, 2009;Ozyilmaz & Gezer, 2010). However, it has been recently used, in view of its synthetic activity in non-aqueous media, to produce several flavour esters, such as IAAc (Feher, Major, Belafi-Bako, & Gubicza, 2009;Güvenç et al, 2002;Mhetras, Patil, & Gokhale, 2010;Ozyilmaz, 2009), butyl acetate (Ozyilmaz & Gezer, 2010;Salah, Ghamghui, Miled, Mejdoub, & Gargouri, 2007), ethyl valerate (Kara-Chaabouni, Ghamgui, Bezzine, Rekik, & Gargouri, 2006;Ozyilmaz & Gezer, 2010), hexyl acetate (Kara-Chaabouni, Ghamgui, Bezzine, Rekik, & Gargouri, 2006), 2-phenylethyl esters (Tan, Yu, Curan, & Liu, 2001) and also non-flavour esters, such as biodisel (Chang, Liao, Lee, & Shieh, 2005;Moreno-Pirajan & Giraldo, 2011;Paula, Urioste, Santos, & de Castro, 2007;Yan, Yan, Liu, Hu, & Wang, 2011), 4-nitrophenylacetate (Ozyilmaz, 2009;Raghuvanshi & Gupta, 2009), 4-nitrophenylpalmitate (Ozyilmaz, 2009) and butyl oleate (Abdul Rahman et al, 2004;Petkar, Lali, Caimi, & Daminati, 2006).…”