Aroma volatile compounds of parsley cultivated in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Egypt extracted by hydrodistillation and headspace solid-phase microextraction

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Abstract

Thirty-nine volatile compounds identified in hydrodistilled essential oil (HD) of Egyptian parsley, representing 97.87% of the total oil, while solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) revealed 16 components constituting 96.54% of the volatile material. Monoterpenes were the predominant in both extracts with considerable quantitative differences, while a dramatic decrease in myristicin from 26.21% in HD extract to 4.87% in HS-SPME extract occurred. Myristicin, β-phellandrene and myrecene were the major components among 38 identified components accounting for 92.87% of the total identified volatiles in Madinah hydrodistillate. Parsley essential oil of Madinah exhibited a higher scavenging ability for 2,2ʹ-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl in comparison to Egyptian parsley oil.

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Farouk, A., Ali, H., Al-Khalifa, A. R., Mohsen, M., & Fikry, R. (2018). Aroma volatile compounds of parsley cultivated in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Egypt extracted by hydrodistillation and headspace solid-phase microextraction. International Journal of Food Properties, 20, S2868–S2877. https://doi.org/10.1080/10942912.2017.1381707

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