WO1991010373A1 - Flavour concentrates and their production - Google Patents

Flavour concentrates and their production Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1991010373A1
WO1991010373A1 PCT/GB1991/000077 GB9100077W WO9110373A1 WO 1991010373 A1 WO1991010373 A1 WO 1991010373A1 GB 9100077 W GB9100077 W GB 9100077W WO 9110373 A1 WO9110373 A1 WO 9110373A1
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WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
distillate
concentrate
reverse osmosis
flavour
retentate
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB1991/000077
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Anthony Martin Humphrey
Gerald Edward Usher
Original Assignee
Bush Boake Allen Limited
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bush Boake Allen Limited filed Critical Bush Boake Allen Limited
Priority to EP91902127A priority Critical patent/EP0511250B1/en
Priority to US07/915,695 priority patent/US5330654A/en
Priority to DE69110662T priority patent/DE69110662T2/en
Publication of WO1991010373A1 publication Critical patent/WO1991010373A1/en
Priority to GR950402253T priority patent/GR3017134T3/en

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23LFOODS, FOODSTUFFS, OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES A21D OR A23B-A23J; THEIR PREPARATION OR TREATMENT, e.g. COOKING, MODIFICATION OF NUTRITIVE QUALITIES, PHYSICAL TREATMENT; PRESERVATION OF FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS, IN GENERAL
    • A23L2/00Non-alcoholic beverages; Dry compositions or concentrates therefor; Their preparation
    • A23L2/02Non-alcoholic beverages; Dry compositions or concentrates therefor; Their preparation containing fruit or vegetable juices
    • A23L2/08Concentrating or drying of juices
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A23FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS; TREATMENT THEREOF, NOT COVERED BY OTHER CLASSES
    • A23LFOODS, FOODSTUFFS, OR NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES, NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES A21D OR A23B-A23J; THEIR PREPARATION OR TREATMENT, e.g. COOKING, MODIFICATION OF NUTRITIVE QUALITIES, PHYSICAL TREATMENT; PRESERVATION OF FOODS OR FOODSTUFFS, IN GENERAL
    • A23L27/00Spices; Flavouring agents or condiments; Artificial sweetening agents; Table salts; Dietetic salt substitutes; Preparation or treatment thereof
    • A23L27/10Natural spices, flavouring agents or condiments; Extracts thereof
    • A23L27/12Natural spices, flavouring agents or condiments; Extracts thereof from fruit, e.g. essential oils

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the production of flavour concentrates based on fruit or vegetable juices and to novel concentrates. It is of particular value for apple and pear juice conncentrates.
  • the major component is generally ethanol and although some of the flavour chemicals are more volatile than ethanol many are less volatile, and so concentration by distillation will tend inevitably to give a product in which the amount of flavours, as a proportion of the ethanol content, is reduced. Also, the repeated fractional distillation that would be required to achieve any concentration of the weak concentrate would tend to result in the flavours undergoing chemical changes due to
  • the described methods all perform reverse osmosis on a liquor which has a substantial saccharide content, generally sugar but optionally starch, and indeed many of the concentration methods are conducted in practice under conditions so as to give a sugar content of above 30%. This is done partly because at such high sugar concentrations the sugar acts as a preservative.
  • the reverse osmosis feed is said, in an example, to have a sugar content of only 1.64% but after reverse osmosis the retentate has a sugar content of 14%. The presence of sugar and other saccharides in the retentate makes the reverse osmosis much less efficient.
  • flavours Another problem with many of the concentrated flavours that are commercially available at present is that they do not give a flavour that resembles the starting juice. Another problem is that even if their initial flavour is satisfactory, it does not withstand cooking, especially microwave cooking, with the result that the cooked product may have a reduced or off-flavour. Synthetic mixtures of chemicals are of course known as flavours, but there is a strong demand for flavours to be wholly derived from natural sources using only physical processes.
  • flavours that does resemble more closely the starting fruit juice or vegetable juice and that preferably is wholly natural and maintains the desired flavour even during microwave or other cooking.
  • a natural flavour concentrate is made of flavour chemicals derived from a fruit or vegetable juice distillate, the process comprising subjecting the distillate to reverse osmosis, characterised in that the distillate is substantially free of saccharide and reverse osmosis is continued until a retentate is obtained that can phase separate, the retentate is phase separated into an aqueous phase and a substantially anhydrous organic phase that contains a high proportion of the flavour chemicals and the organic phase is recovered.
  • the organic phase concentrate obtained by this technique can have a higher concentration of flavour chemicals than has been obtainable by prior techniques and the resultant concentrate can give flavours that match closely the naturally occurring fruit or vegetable flavours, and the flavours can be stable during microwave and other cooking.
  • a natural concentrate according to the invention is derived essentially by concentration of a fruit or vegetable juice distillate and the concentrate is substantially free of saccharide, upon dilution the concentrate gives substantially the flavour of the original juice, and the concentrate consists essentially of 3 to 40% water, 5 to 60% Cl-4 alcohols and aldehydes and 30 to 85% organic chemicals having at least 5 carbon atoms typically selected from aldehydes, alcohols and esters.
  • the concentrate is substantially free of saccharide and so generally the amount of saccharide is below 5% and usually below 1% by weight of the concentrate.
  • the proportions of the various components in the concentrate depend in part on the components in the initial fruit juice distillate, from which the concentrate is generally obtained. Some distillates have a low ethanol content and/or a low content of other organics while others have a higher content of such materials.
  • the main flavour compounds in the concentrate are typically esters, alcohols and aldehydes containing at least 5 carbon atoms and so preferably the concentrate has as high a concentration of these as can be conveniently achieved. Typically the amount is at least 50%, for instance 50 to 80% by weight of the concentrate.
  • the concentrates of the invention are much more concentrated than the flavour concentrate typically available before, which generally has 70 to 90% water whereas in the invention the amount of water is generally below 40%, preferably below 25%. It is unnecessary to make the concentrate wholly anhydrous and so generally it contains at least 5% water.
  • a convenient concentrate has water present in an amount that is approximately the saturation value of water in the organic components of the concentrate.
  • the remainder of the concentrate i.e. the aqueous phase which has been separated from the organic phase consists mainly of the low molecular weight alcohols and aldehydes such as ethanol, acetaldehyde and butanol. Preferably the amount of these is below 30%, but generally it is at least 10 to 15%.
  • the concentrate can be derived from any fruit or vegetable from which the distillate has a non-aqueous component containing flavour chemicals but preferably the juice is not citrus and the invention is particularly valuable for obtaining flavour chemicals from apple or pear juice distillate.
  • the concentrate is obtained by concentration of the material known as "apple ester” or "pear ester”.
  • apple juice and other fruit juices generally contain a relatively high amount of ethanol it is not possible to obtain the concentrate satisfactorily by freeze concentration or by distillation and so preferably the concentrate is made by the reverse osmosis process of the invention.
  • the "apple ester" or other distillate that is used as the starting material for the process must be substantially free of saccharide since the overall process of the invention generally involves the distillate being concentrated from 50 to 2,000 times and yet the final product must still be relatively free of saccharide. Accordingly the starting apple ester or other distillate generally contains below 0.05, usually below 0.01 and preferably below 0.001% saccharide. These low concentrations are important since the presence of significant amounts of saccharide will interfere with the high degrees of concentration that are available in the invention.
  • the starting distillate may be a commercially available fruit ester, or the comparable product derived from vegetable juice, typically having a concentration such that 100 litres of the original juice is distilled to give between 0.2 and 2, often around 0.5 to 1, litres of the fruit ester.
  • An important feature of the invention is the combination of reverse osmosis to remove a substantial proportion of the water while retaining the majority of the flavour chemicals up to a concentration of flavour chemicals which is sufficiently great that useful phase separation can occur. Accordingly the reverse osmosis must be conducted to give a sufficient concentration that useful phase separation can occur. If the original fruit ester or other distillate contains an oil that is liable to separate spontaneously before reverse osmosis (e.g., limonene oil from citrus juice) then it is desirable to phase separate this before subjecting the distillate to reverse osmosis. Preferably the distillate is not a citrus distillate and so this initial separation is usually unnecessary.
  • the phase separation of the reverse osmosis retentate preferably occurs spontaneously but can be caused or promoted by modifying the rententate, eg by adjusting its temperature.
  • the reverse osmosis should be conducted using conventional apparatus but with a membrane having a cut-off that is preferably at or below 150 Dalton, most preferably at or below 100 Dalton.
  • the liquor is preferably subjected to a pressure of 30 to 80 Bar, generally 50 to 75, most usually around 70 Bar. It is necessary to cool the process liquid in order to keep the temperature to reasonably low levels, preferably below 60°C, most preferably below 45 ⁇ C.
  • the area of the membrane will be chosen so as to give the desired rate of concentration.
  • flavour is retained in the retentate in each instance but, because of the high concentration in the final retentate, the aqueous phase that separates from the organic phase will itself have a relatively high concentration of flavour. It is therefore desirable to recover flavour from the aqueous phase that is separated from the organic phase in the final retentate.
  • This recovery can be by reverse osmosis or other techniques but preferably is by fractional distillation, and generally it is necessary to collect only the early, or the early to middle, distillate fractions. Thus it is generally desirable to collect not more than the first 70%, and generally not more than the first 40% of the distillate from the separated aqueous phase.
  • the collected distillate is itself a useful flavour concentrate that can be a novel concentrate according to the invention, or it can be blended with the organic phase that phase separates from the final retentate.
  • the aqueous permeate from the reverse osmosis process or processes will also contain some flavour chemicals and it can be desirable to recover these. This can be done by passing the permeate back to the start of the process or by subjecting it to reverse osmosis or by distilling it and collecting the early distillate, generally not more than the first 20% and preferably not more than the first 10%.
  • the reverse osmosis can be conducted in a single prolonged process but this requires a very large reservoir for the starting distillate since the degree of concentration by reverse osmosis is generally in the range 30 to 100 fold, often 50 to 75 fold.
  • the further concentration by phase separation is generally in the range 5 to 30 fold, often 10 to 20 fold.
  • around 1000 litres of initial "fruit ester" might give around 15 litres of final retentate which then is phase separated to give around 1 litre organic phase and around 14 litres of concentrated aqueous phase.
  • the permeate from the second and subsequent stages may be recycled or may be subjected to further reverse osmosis in order to recover any flavour chemicals.
  • the most convenient and efficient procedure is to do the reverse osmosis in a first stage in a plurality of batches, to combine the retentates from these batches to form a feed for a second stage, and then to collect the retentates from a plurality of these second stage batches to form the feed for a third stage, which produces a retentate that is then subjected to the phase separation.
  • Flow Sheet 1 is a diagrammatic representation of an example of the concentration stages of apple ester in accordance with the invention, showing overall quantities. The broken lines indicate where recycling is advantageous.
  • Flow Sheet 2 is a diagrammatic representation of an example of the concentration stages in concentrating pear ester in accordance with the invention, showing overall quantities. The broken lines indicate where recycling is advantageous.
  • a 1000 litre batch of commercial "apple ester" was separated into five 200 litre batches and each batch was concentrated by reverse osmosis.
  • the equipment used comprised two modules each 1.3 metres and containing 18 membrane tubes with a polyamide coating and having a nominal molecular weight cut off of 100 Daltons.
  • the 36 membrane tubes were connected in series and pressurised to
  • the first 200 litre batch of "apple ester" was circulated in the reverse osmosis plant in a first stage until the volume of retentate was reduced to 50 litres
  • the 64-fold concentrated retentate was displaced from the inside of the tubular membrane using the third stage permeate.
  • phase separation occured.
  • the oil phase was decanted off.
  • the remaining 14.8 litres of aqueous portion was subjected to a simple distillation at atmospheric pressure to recover the first 40% of distillate. This distillate could be used without further concentration, but in the example was fractionally distilled to recover a further quantity of oil.
  • the resultant total yield of highly concentrated apple oil was 1.6 litres representing a 625 fold overall concentration.
  • the permeate from the first stages of the reverse osmosis were combined (750 litres) and subjected to simple atmospheric distillation to recover the first 5% of distillate. This distillate contained 2% acetaldehyde and was set aside for use in natural flavour formulations.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Food Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Nutrition Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Polymers & Plastics (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Non-Alcoholic Beverages (AREA)
  • Separation Using Semi-Permeable Membranes (AREA)
  • Seasonings (AREA)
  • Preparation Of Compounds By Using Micro-Organisms (AREA)
  • Organic Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds And Preparation Thereof (AREA)
  • Fats And Perfumes (AREA)

Abstract

This invention relates to the production of flavour concentrates based on apple or pear juice or other fruit or vegetable juices and to novel concentrates. The process comprises subjecting a fruit or vegetable distillate to reverse osmosis to form an aqueous permeate and a retentate containing a flavour chemical. The reverse osmosis is continued until the retentate can phase separate into an aqeous phase and a substantially anhydrous organic phase. The organic phase, which contains a high proportion of the flavour chemicals, is recovered. The organic phase concentrate produced has a high concentration of flavour chemicals and is substantially free of saccharide.

Description

Flavour Concentrates and their Production
This invention relates to the production of flavour concentrates based on fruit or vegetable juices and to novel concentrates. It is of particular value for apple and pear juice conncentrates.
It is standard practice to concentrate fruit and vegetable juices to produce concentrates that, upon dilution with water, resemble the original juice. The traditional way of concentration is by distillation. Unfortunately many of the volatile, but very desirable, flavours are taken off in the distillate. It is therefore known to fractionally distil this distillate so as to concentrate some at least of these flavours. The resultant concentrate is still dilute, since it contains more than 90% water and perhaps only around 1% flavour chemicals, and is known by various names. When it is derived from a fruit juice it is known in the trade as a "fruit ester". Usually this concentrate, or the early fractions of the initial distillate, are returned to the concentrated fruit or vegetable juice so as to enhance its flavour.
It might be thought that it would be possible to concentrate the "fruit ester" or other concentrated distillate to a higher concentration by distillation.
However this is not practicable because of the boiling points and azeotroping potential of the various components in the weak concentrate. For instance the major component (apart from water) is generally ethanol and although some of the flavour chemicals are more volatile than ethanol many are less volatile, and so concentration by distillation will tend inevitably to give a product in which the amount of flavours, as a proportion of the ethanol content, is reduced. Also, the repeated fractional distillation that would be required to achieve any concentration of the weak concentrate would tend to result in the flavours undergoing chemical changes due to
SUBSTITUTESHEΪT hydrolysis or degradation as a result of the repeated exposure to elevated temperatures.
Although distillation is the normal way of concentrating fruit juices and products derived from them, reverse osmosis has also been proposed. In U.S. 3,743,513 fruit juice is concentrated by distillation but the flavour of the concentrate is improved by blending into the concentrate a separately produced concentrate obtained by reverse osmosis of fruit juice. In U.S. 4,322,448 a juice is subjected to reverse osmosis to give a concentrated retentate and a permeate that contains desirable flavours and which is then subjected to additional reverse osmosis whereupon the flavours are this time retained in the retentate, rather than in the permeate, and the two retentates are then blended.
In U.S. 4,401,678 a juice is subjected to reverse osmosis to give a retentate of reduced flavour and a permeate containing the flavours. The molecular weight cut-off of the membrane for this purpose is around 200 Dalton.
In EP 174594 a juice is subjected to ultra-filtration to give a retentate and an aqueous permeate containing flavour, and this permeate is then subjected to reverse osmosis to collect the flavours in the retentate, and the two retentates are then combined.
In EP 110638 citrus juice is stripped by steam to give a concentrate and a distillate which is then condensed, limonene oil is separated from the condensate, and the resultant aqueous phase is then concentrated by freezing or reverse osmosis. Juice or sugar is added to the concentrate before the reverse osmosis, and the resultant concentrated product is then blended with the original concentrate. Thus all these methods are designed to increase the concentration of flavour in the fruit ester component and then to put it back into the original fruit juice concentrate. It has therefore been satisfactory for the concentration of the flavours that is put back into the fruit juice concentrate to be relatively low, for instance below 1% (as indicated above) . The described methods all perform reverse osmosis on a liquor which has a substantial saccharide content, generally sugar but optionally starch, and indeed many of the concentration methods are conducted in practice under conditions so as to give a sugar content of above 30%. This is done partly because at such high sugar concentrations the sugar acts as a preservative. In EP 174594 the reverse osmosis feed is said, in an example, to have a sugar content of only 1.64% but after reverse osmosis the retentate has a sugar content of 14%. The presence of sugar and other saccharides in the retentate makes the reverse osmosis much less efficient.
Another problem with many of the concentrated flavours that are commercially available at present is that they do not give a flavour that resembles the starting juice. Another problem is that even if their initial flavour is satisfactory, it does not withstand cooking, especially microwave cooking, with the result that the cooked product may have a reduced or off-flavour. Synthetic mixtures of chemicals are of course known as flavours, but there is a strong demand for flavours to be wholly derived from natural sources using only physical processes.
There is a particular problem with apple and pear concentrates: none of those that have been proposed have both a high concentration and good flavour properties when diluted.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to produce a concentrate of flavours that does resemble more closely the starting fruit juice or vegetable juice and that preferably is wholly natural and maintains the desired flavour even during microwave or other cooking.
According to the invention, a natural flavour concentrate is made of flavour chemicals derived from a fruit or vegetable juice distillate, the process comprising subjecting the distillate to reverse osmosis, characterised in that the distillate is substantially free of saccharide and reverse osmosis is continued until a retentate is obtained that can phase separate, the retentate is phase separated into an aqueous phase and a substantially anhydrous organic phase that contains a high proportion of the flavour chemicals and the organic phase is recovered. The organic phase concentrate obtained by this technique can have a higher concentration of flavour chemicals than has been obtainable by prior techniques and the resultant concentrate can give flavours that match closely the naturally occurring fruit or vegetable flavours, and the flavours can be stable during microwave and other cooking.
Concentrates obtainable by the process are themselves novel materials.
A natural concentrate according to the invention is derived essentially by concentration of a fruit or vegetable juice distillate and the concentrate is substantially free of saccharide, upon dilution the concentrate gives substantially the flavour of the original juice, and the concentrate consists essentially of 3 to 40% water, 5 to 60% Cl-4 alcohols and aldehydes and 30 to 85% organic chemicals having at least 5 carbon atoms typically selected from aldehydes, alcohols and esters.
The concentrate is substantially free of saccharide and so generally the amount of saccharide is below 5% and usually below 1% by weight of the concentrate. The proportions of the various components in the concentrate depend in part on the components in the initial fruit juice distillate, from which the concentrate is generally obtained. Some distillates have a low ethanol content and/or a low content of other organics while others have a higher content of such materials. The main flavour compounds in the concentrate are typically esters, alcohols and aldehydes containing at least 5 carbon atoms and so preferably the concentrate has as high a concentration of these as can be conveniently achieved. Typically the amount is at least 50%, for instance 50 to 80% by weight of the concentrate. The concentrates of the invention are much more concentrated than the flavour concentrate typically available before, which generally has 70 to 90% water whereas in the invention the amount of water is generally below 40%, preferably below 25%. It is unnecessary to make the concentrate wholly anhydrous and so generally it contains at least 5% water. A convenient concentrate has water present in an amount that is approximately the saturation value of water in the organic components of the concentrate. The remainder of the concentrate i.e. the aqueous phase which has been separated from the organic phase consists mainly of the low molecular weight alcohols and aldehydes such as ethanol, acetaldehyde and butanol. Preferably the amount of these is below 30%, but generally it is at least 10 to 15%.
The concentrate can be derived from any fruit or vegetable from which the distillate has a non-aqueous component containing flavour chemicals but preferably the juice is not citrus and the invention is particularly valuable for obtaining flavour chemicals from apple or pear juice distillate. Thus preferably the concentrate is obtained by concentration of the material known as "apple ester" or "pear ester".
Because apple juice and other fruit juices generally contain a relatively high amount of ethanol it is not possible to obtain the concentrate satisfactorily by freeze concentration or by distillation and so preferably the concentrate is made by the reverse osmosis process of the invention. The "apple ester" or other distillate that is used as the starting material for the process must be substantially free of saccharide since the overall process of the invention generally involves the distillate being concentrated from 50 to 2,000 times and yet the final product must still be relatively free of saccharide. Accordingly the starting apple ester or other distillate generally contains below 0.05, usually below 0.01 and preferably below 0.001% saccharide. These low concentrations are important since the presence of significant amounts of saccharide will interfere with the high degrees of concentration that are available in the invention. The starting distillate may be a commercially available fruit ester, or the comparable product derived from vegetable juice, typically having a concentration such that 100 litres of the original juice is distilled to give between 0.2 and 2, often around 0.5 to 1, litres of the fruit ester.
An important feature of the invention is the combination of reverse osmosis to remove a substantial proportion of the water while retaining the majority of the flavour chemicals up to a concentration of flavour chemicals which is sufficiently great that useful phase separation can occur. Accordingly the reverse osmosis must be conducted to give a sufficient concentration that useful phase separation can occur. If the original fruit ester or other distillate contains an oil that is liable to separate spontaneously before reverse osmosis (e.g., limonene oil from citrus juice) then it is desirable to phase separate this before subjecting the distillate to reverse osmosis. Preferably the distillate is not a citrus distillate and so this initial separation is usually unnecessary. The phase separation of the reverse osmosis retentate preferably occurs spontaneously but can be caused or promoted by modifying the rententate, eg by adjusting its temperature.
The reverse osmosis should be conducted using conventional apparatus but with a membrane having a cut-off that is preferably at or below 150 Dalton, most preferably at or below 100 Dalton. In order to give an adequate flux rate, the liquor is preferably subjected to a pressure of 30 to 80 Bar, generally 50 to 75, most usually around 70 Bar. It is necessary to cool the process liquid in order to keep the temperature to reasonably low levels, preferably below 60°C, most preferably below 45βC. The area of the membrane will be chosen so as to give the desired rate of concentration. The most significant part of the flavour is retained in the retentate in each instance but, because of the high concentration in the final retentate, the aqueous phase that separates from the organic phase will itself have a relatively high concentration of flavour. It is therefore desirable to recover flavour from the aqueous phase that is separated from the organic phase in the final retentate. This recovery can be by reverse osmosis or other techniques but preferably is by fractional distillation, and generally it is necessary to collect only the early, or the early to middle, distillate fractions. Thus it is generally desirable to collect not more than the first 70%, and generally not more than the first 40% of the distillate from the separated aqueous phase. The collected distillate is itself a useful flavour concentrate that can be a novel concentrate according to the invention, or it can be blended with the organic phase that phase separates from the final retentate.
The aqueous permeate from the reverse osmosis process or processes will also contain some flavour chemicals and it can be desirable to recover these. This can be done by passing the permeate back to the start of the process or by subjecting it to reverse osmosis or by distilling it and collecting the early distillate, generally not more than the first 20% and preferably not more than the first 10%.
The reverse osmosis can be conducted in a single prolonged process but this requires a very large reservoir for the starting distillate since the degree of concentration by reverse osmosis is generally in the range 30 to 100 fold, often 50 to 75 fold. The further concentration by phase separation is generally in the range 5 to 30 fold, often 10 to 20 fold. For instance around 1000 litres of initial "fruit ester" might give around 15 litres of final retentate which then is phase separated to give around 1 litre organic phase and around 14 litres of concentrated aqueous phase. It is generally more efficient and convenient to do the reverse osmosis in at least two stages, in which event any valuable flavour chemicals in the aqueous permeate from the first stage, which are preferably recovered by distillation with the early distillate being collected. The permeate from the second and subsequent stages may be recycled or may be subjected to further reverse osmosis in order to recover any flavour chemicals. The most convenient and efficient procedure is to do the reverse osmosis in a first stage in a plurality of batches, to combine the retentates from these batches to form a feed for a second stage, and then to collect the retentates from a plurality of these second stage batches to form the feed for a third stage, which produces a retentate that is then subjected to the phase separation.
Flow Sheet 1 is a diagrammatic representation of an example of the concentration stages of apple ester in accordance with the invention, showing overall quantities. The broken lines indicate where recycling is advantageous.
Flow Sheet 2 is a diagrammatic representation of an example of the concentration stages in concentrating pear ester in accordance with the invention, showing overall quantities. The broken lines indicate where recycling is advantageous.
The following is an example. Example 1
A 1000 litre batch of commercial "apple ester" was separated into five 200 litre batches and each batch was concentrated by reverse osmosis. The equipment used comprised two modules each 1.3 metres and containing 18 membrane tubes with a polyamide coating and having a nominal molecular weight cut off of 100 Daltons. The 36 membrane tubes were connected in series and pressurised to
70 bar in order to achieve satisfactory reverse osmosis.
The first 200 litre batch of "apple ester" was circulated in the reverse osmosis plant in a first stage until the volume of retentate was reduced to 50 litres
(4-fold concentration) . The permeate (150 litres) was stored for subsequent distillation in order to recover the acetaldehyde. In a second stage, reverse osmosis was continued until the retentate was reduced to 12.5 litres of 16-fold concentration. The remaining 37.5 litres of permeate from this stage was recycled by combining with the second 200 litre batch of "apple ester" for 16-fold concentration in a similar manner. Again the permeate from this second 16 fold concentration was recycled by mixing with the third 200 litre batch of "apple ester" before concentration.
In a third stage, 25 litre portions of the 16-fold concentrate were reduced by reverse osmosis to 6.25 litres (64-fold concentration) . A small quantity of oil was separated out at this stage and was decanted off.
The remaining 18.75 litres from each portion of the 16 fold permeate from this third stage was combined with the subsequent 25 litres of 16-fold concentrate to be further concentrated to approximately 64-fold concentration.
The 64-fold concentrated retentate was displaced from the inside of the tubular membrane using the third stage permeate. When all 1000 litres of "apple ester" had been processed in this way to give a 64-fold concentrated retentate, phase separation occured. The oil phase was decanted off. The remaining 14.8 litres of aqueous portion was subjected to a simple distillation at atmospheric pressure to recover the first 40% of distillate. This distillate could be used without further concentration, but in the example was fractionally distilled to recover a further quantity of oil. Using a 15 plate column the ethanol was preferentially removed leaving a residue of from which a further phase separation produced 0.8 litres of apple oil. The resultant total yield of highly concentrated apple oil was 1.6 litres representing a 625 fold overall concentration. The permeate from the first stages of the reverse osmosis were combined (750 litres) and subjected to simple atmospheric distillation to recover the first 5% of distillate. This distillate contained 2% acetaldehyde and was set aside for use in natural flavour formulations.
Example 2
400 litres of commercial "pear ester" was concentrated by reverse osmosis, as described in example 1, until it was reduced to a volume of 6.25 litres. Phase separation of the retentate then produced 50ml of oil which was decanted off. The remaining aqueous phase was distilled and a further 100 ml oil was obtained, giving a total yield of 150 ml of highly concentrated pear oil representing a 2667-fold concentration.
Permeate
Figure imgf000013_0001
x64 Retenate 15.61
Aqueous residue
Figure imgf000013_0002
stillation 15 plates
Ethanol distillate
Figure imgf000013_0003
Aqueous residue
Figure imgf000013_0004
SUBSTITUTE SHEET x4 Permeate 300
Figure imgf000014_0001
x16
Figure imgf000014_0002
/
/ Reverse osmosis
/ x64 Permeate 18 ,.75 ϊ - x64 Vj I Retentate 6 . 25 1
Aqueous residue 3.7 l
Figure imgf000014_0003
[ x64 x2.5 Aqueous 2.5 l!
Fractional Distillation (Atmospheric 15 plates )
Ethanol distillate 1.2
Figure imgf000014_0004
Aqueous residue
Figure imgf000014_0005
Pear Oil (Secondary) 100ml TE SHEET

Claims

1. A process for preparation of a natural flavour concentrate comprising flavour chemicals derived from a fruit or vegetable juice distillate comprising subjecting the distillate to reverse osmosis characterised in that the distillate is substantially free of saccharide and reverse osmosis is continued until a retentate is obtained that can phase separate, the rententate is phase separated into an aqueous phase and a substantially anhydrous organic phase which contains a high proportion of the flavour chemicals, and the organic phase is recovered.
2. A process according to claim 1 in which the distillate is of apple or pear juice.
3. A process according to claim 1 or claim 2 in which the reverse osmosis is conducted in at least two stages and the permeate from the second and subsequent stages is recycled to an earlier reverse osmosis stage.
4. A process according to claim 3 in which the distillate is concentrated in the first stage to 50-75 fold, and in the second stage to 5-30 fold.
5. A process according to any preceding claim in which the reverse osmosis concentration of the distillate is carried out until the phase separation of the retentate occurs substantially spontaneously.
6. A process according to any preceding claim in which the reverse osmosis is conducted using a membrane having a cut-off at or below 150 Dalton, preferably at or below 100 Dalton.
7. A process according to any preceding claim in which the reverse osmosis is carried out at a pressure of from
50-75 bar, preferably around 70 bar.
8. A process according to any preceding claim in which the temperature of the distillate and all retentate is maintained below 60°C, preferably below 45°C.
9. A process according to any preceding claim in which the aqueous phase that is separated from the organic phase of the retentate is fractionally distilled and the early fractions up to not more than 70% of the distillate are collected.
10. A natural flavour concentrate prepared by the process of any of claims 1 to 9.
11. A natural concentrate derived by concentration of a fruit or vegetable juice distillate, which is substantially free of saccharide and upon dilution is substantially the flavour of the original juice, the concentrate comprising essentially 3-40% water, 5-60% C^ alcohols and aldehydes and 30-85% organic chemicals having at least 5 carbon atoms, typically selected from aldehydes, alcohols and esters.
12. A natural concentrate according to claim 11 derived from apple or pear juice distillate.
13. A concentrate according to claim 11 or claim 12 in which the saccharide content is below 5%, preferably below
1% by weight of the concentrate.
14. A natural concentrate according to any of claims 11 to 13 in which the content of organic chemicals having at least 5 carbon atoms is from 50-80% by weight.
15. A natural concentrate according to any of claims 11-14 in which the water content is below 40%, preferably below 25% by weight.
16. A natural concentrate according to any of claims 11-15 in which the content of C1-4 alcohols and aldehydes is from
10-30% by weight.
17. A natural concentrate according to any of claims 11-15 in which the saccharide content in the distillate is below 0.05% by weight, preferably below 0.01% by weight.
PCT/GB1991/000077 1990-01-19 1991-01-18 Flavour concentrates and their production WO1991010373A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

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EP91902127A EP0511250B1 (en) 1990-01-19 1991-01-18 Flavour concentrates and their production
US07/915,695 US5330654A (en) 1990-01-19 1991-01-18 Flavor concentrates and their production
DE69110662T DE69110662T2 (en) 1990-01-19 1991-01-18 FLAVORING CONCENTRATES AND THEIR PRODUCTION.
GR950402253T GR3017134T3 (en) 1990-01-19 1995-08-16 Flavour concentrates and their production.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9001322.8 1990-01-19
GB909001322A GB9001322D0 (en) 1990-01-19 1990-01-19 Flavour concentrates and their production

Publications (1)

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WO1991010373A1 true WO1991010373A1 (en) 1991-07-25

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AT (1) ATE123928T1 (en)
AU (1) AU7069891A (en)
DE (1) DE69110662T2 (en)
DK (1) DK0511250T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2074260T3 (en)
GB (1) GB9001322D0 (en)
GR (1) GR3017134T3 (en)
TR (1) TR25114A (en)
WO (1) WO1991010373A1 (en)
ZA (1) ZA91387B (en)

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US5935630A (en) * 1994-06-02 1999-08-10 Britannia Natural Products Limited Juice and Juice aroma concentrate production

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US5534280A (en) * 1987-12-04 1996-07-09 Welch; George Method for dehydration of solid foods
US7175862B2 (en) * 2004-01-28 2007-02-13 Access Business Group International Llc Method of preparing kakadu plum powder
US8293299B2 (en) 2009-09-11 2012-10-23 Kraft Foods Global Brands Llc Containers and methods for dispensing multiple doses of a concentrated liquid, and shelf stable Concentrated liquids
US11013248B2 (en) 2012-05-25 2021-05-25 Kraft Foods Group Brands Llc Shelf stable, concentrated, liquid flavorings and methods of preparing beverages with the concentrated liquid flavorings

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EP0110638A2 (en) * 1982-11-19 1984-06-13 The Procter & Gamble Company Process for preparing citrus juice concentrate
EP0174594A1 (en) * 1984-09-07 1986-03-19 THE TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYSTEM Method of producing sterile and optionally concentrated juices with improved flavor and optionally reduced acid

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US3743513A (en) * 1971-06-18 1973-07-03 Hydronautics Blend of vacuum and reverse osmosis fruit juice concentrates
CA1092884A (en) * 1978-06-14 1981-01-06 Takeshi Matsuura Method of concentrating natural fruit juices by reverse osmosis
US4401678A (en) * 1981-11-05 1983-08-30 Jordan & Ste-Michelle Cellars Ltd. Production of wine
EP0110638A2 (en) * 1982-11-19 1984-06-13 The Procter & Gamble Company Process for preparing citrus juice concentrate
EP0174594A1 (en) * 1984-09-07 1986-03-19 THE TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYSTEM Method of producing sterile and optionally concentrated juices with improved flavor and optionally reduced acid

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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DK0511250T3 (en) 1995-11-13
EP0511250A1 (en) 1992-11-04
ES2074260T3 (en) 1995-09-01
DE69110662D1 (en) 1995-07-27
ZA91387B (en) 1992-03-25
EP0511250B1 (en) 1995-06-21
GB9001322D0 (en) 1990-03-21
US5330654A (en) 1994-07-19
GR3017134T3 (en) 1995-11-30
DE69110662T2 (en) 1995-12-14
TR25114A (en) 1992-11-01
ATE123928T1 (en) 1995-07-15
AU7069891A (en) 1991-08-05

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