“…Although initial NMR applications in foods were limited to low resolution NMR analysis of moisture, at the end of the 20th century, NMR started involving high‐resolution studies of liquid and solid state matrices for several purposes. These included authentication and classification (Dais, Hatzakis, ; Marcone et al., ; Spyros & Dais, ), quality control (Marcone et al., ), sensory evaluation (Malmendal et al., ), structural characterization and compositional analysis (Bertocchi & Paci, ; Cheng & Neiss, ; Spyros & Dais, , ; Vlahov, ), understanding molecular mechanisms and interactions of food components (Fernandes, Brás, Mateus, & Freitas, ; Leydet et al., ; Tiziani, Schwartz, & Vodovotz, ), as well as the investigation of nutritional approaches to health (Ramakrishnan & Luthria, ). The reasons for the emergence of NMR‐related food applications were the development of powerful multinuclear/multidimensional and solvent suppression NMR techniques, as well as advances in NMR hardware, including cryoprobes, high‐throughput technologies, and user‐friendly software.…”