Abstract

This study aimed to provide information about the changes in fatty acid composition and quality in Ruditapes decussatus tissue after four culinary treatments (steamed, baked, grilled and fried). All treated samples showed a significant decrease in moisture and protein. In contrast, a significant increase in fat content resulted from the grilled and fried treatments. Saturated fatty acid was significantly higher in fresh clams than all cooking processes, except in fried ones. Monounsaturated fatty acid and polyunsaturated fatty acid varied significantly between fresh and cooked clams with high values recorded for fried clams. The n-3/n-6 ratio, peroxide index, EPA+DHA and atherogenicity index decreased significantly after the cooking processes particularly in fried clams. The mineral levels (Mg, Ca and Mn) of cooked clams decreased considerably with grilled and fried treatments. The impacts of cooking on the fatty acid composition and protein content in clam tissue was evaluated by lipid peroxidation (TBARS, PV, FFA, TOR) and protein oxidation (AOPP and PCO), which varied statistically in fried, steamed, grilled and baked samples; indicating alterations in cooked clam tissues structure. Based on our results, steaming is recommended for the preparation of clams because it preserves the most nutritional tissue quality.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesSUMMARY: This study aimed to provide information about the changes in fatty acid composition and quality in Ruditapes decussatus tissue after four culinary treatments

  • The moisture content of the whole tissue of clams ranged from 61.3% to 88.9%, which decreased after cooking

  • The results showed statistically significant modifications in the changes in the proximate compositions of uncooked and cooked clam tissues

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Summary

Objectives

SUMMARY: This study aimed to provide information about the changes in fatty acid composition and quality in Ruditapes decussatus tissue after four culinary treatments. The aim of this study was (i) to determine the effect of four cooking methods on the biochemical composition and fatty acid profile of the shellfish R. decussatus from Tunisian coasts and (ii) to evaluate the lipid and protein degradation of clam tissue after cooking through a battery of biomarkers: peroxide value (PV), free fatty acid (FFA), thiobabituric acid (MDA), advanced oxidation protein product (AOPP) and protein carbonyls (PCO)

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