Abstract

BackgroundTraditional fermented alcoholic beverages are indigenous to a particular area and are prepared by the local people using an age-old techniques and locally available raw materials. The main objective of this work was the direct determination of ethanol in traditional fermented alcoholic beverages using mid infrared spectroscopy with partial least squares regression, verifying the robustness of the calibration models and to assess the quality of beverages.ResultsThe level of ethanol determination in Ethiopian traditional fermented alcoholic beverages was done using mid infrared spectroscopy with partial least squares regression (MIR-PLS). The calibration and validation sets, and real samples spectra were collected with 32 scans from 850–1200 cm−1. A total of 25 synthetic standards (calibration and validation sets) with ethanol (2–10% w/w) and sugars (glucose, fructose, sucrose and maltose) (0–5% w/w) compositions were used to construct and validate the models. Twenty-five different calibration models were validated by cross-validation approach with 25 left out standards. A large number of pre-treatments were verified, but the best pre-treatment was subtracting minimum + 2nd derivative. The model was found to have the highest coefficients of determination for calibration and cross-validation (0.999, 0.999) and root mean square error of prediction [0.1% (w/w)]. For practical relevance, the MIR-PLS predicted values were compared against the values determined by gas chromatography. The predicted values of the model were found to be in excellent agreement with gas chromatographic measurements. In addition, recovery test was conducted with spiking 2.4–6.4% (w/w) ethanol. Based on the obtained recovery percentage, 85.4–107% (w/w), the matrix effects of the samples were not considerable.ConclusionThe proposed technique, MIR-PLS at 1200–850 cm−1 spectral region was found appropriate to quantify ethanol in fermented alcoholic beverages. Among the studied beverages (Tella, Netch Tella, Filter Tella, Korefe, Keribo, Borde and Birz), the average ethanol contents ranged from 0.77–9.1% (v/v). Tej was found to have the highest ethanol content whereas Keribo had the least ethanol content. The developed method was simple, fast, precise and accurate. Moreover, no sample preparation was required at all. However, it should be noted that the present procedure is probably not usable for regulatory purposes (e.g. controlling labelling).

Highlights

  • Traditional fermented alcoholic beverages are indigenous to a particular area and are prepared by the local people using an age-old techniques and locally available raw materials

  • Traditional fermented beverages are indigenous to a particular area and have been prepared by the local people using an age-old techniques and locally available raw materials [15, 16]; different countries have various indigenous fermented alcoholic beverages [17,18,19,20,21,22]

  • The main objective of this work was the direct determination of ethanol in traditional fermented alcoholic beverages with MIR-partial least squares (PLS), verifying the robustness of the calibration models, to allow an assessment of whether the accuracy and precision of the method is fit for purpose and to assess the quality of beverages

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional fermented alcoholic beverages are indigenous to a particular area and are prepared by the local people using an age-old techniques and locally available raw materials. Traditional fermented beverages are indigenous to a particular area and have been prepared by the local people using an age-old techniques and locally available raw materials [15, 16]; different countries have various indigenous fermented alcoholic beverages [17,18,19,20,21,22]. In Ethiopia many traditional fermented beverages are known They are high alcoholic beers such as Tella, Korefe; low alcoholic beers such as Keribo, Buqri, Shameta, Borde and wine such as Tej made from honey [23, 24]. Keribo is prepared from deeply roasted barley that is added to boiling water and sugar [23]

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