(19)
(11) EP 0 199 354 B1

(12) EUROPEAN PATENT SPECIFICATION

(45) Mention of the grant of the patent:
19.07.1989 Bulletin 1989/29

(21) Application number: 86105661.2

(22) Date of filing: 24.04.1986
(51) International Patent Classification (IPC)4C11B 9/00, A23L 1/221

(54)

Essential oils treated to remove harsh notes therefrom

Essentielle Öle, die behandelt sind zum Ausscheiden von harten Noten daraus

Huiles essentielles traitées pour en éliminer les notes âpres


(84) Designated Contracting States:
BE DE FR GB IT SE

(30) Priority: 26.04.1985 US 727646

(43) Date of publication of application:
29.10.1986 Bulletin 1986/44

(73) Proprietor: NABISCO BRANDS, INC.
East Hanover New Jersey 07936 (US)

(72) Inventor:
  • Hussein, Mamoun M.
    Rye, N.Y. (US)

(74) Representative: Lehn, Werner, Dipl.-Ing. et al
Hoffmann Eitle, Patent- und Rechtsanwälte, Postfach 81 04 20
81904 München
81904 München (DE)


(56) References cited: : 
EP-A- 0 113 988
FR-A- 1 131 573
DE-C- 334 274
GB-A- 1 130 230
   
  • BULLETIN DE LA SOCIETE CHIMIQUE DE FRANCE, no. 9, 1967, pages 3152-3154; YVES-RENE NAVES: "No 561. - Etudes sur les matières végétales volatiles CCIII (1). Présence de n-undécatriènes-1,3,5 dans l'huile essentielle de la gomme-résine de galbanum"
  • AGRICULTURAL & BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, vol. 44, no. 7, July 1980, pages 1535-1543, Tokyo, JP; K.TAKAHASHI et al.: "A new keto-alcohol, (-)-mintlactone, (+)-isomintlactone and minor components in peppermint oil"
   
Note: Within nine months from the publication of the mention of the grant of the European patent, any person may give notice to the European Patent Office of opposition to the European patent granted. Notice of opposition shall be filed in a written reasoned statement. It shall not be deemed to have been filed until the opposition fee has been paid. (Art. 99(1) European Patent Convention).


Description


[0001] The present invention relates to a process for removing harsh flavor off-notes from the essential oil of a botanical material.

[0002] Essential oils which are freshly distilled from botanical matter usually have, when freshly made, what are known as harsh tasting flavor notes. These harsh flavor off-notes are also known as green, burnt, still off-notes. This is particularly true in the case of peppermint oil or spearmint oil which is freshly made by means of steam distillation of the parent botanical matter from which the oil is extracted. The customary procedure employed for removing those harsh flavor notes which are present in the freshly obtained oil is to allow the oil to age or mellow for periods of about 6 to 24 months, in full containers in the presence of oxygen and in the absence of actinic radiation. This aging-mellowing process is economically unattractive since it requires the use of carefully monitored storage facilities, for long periods of time and supervised by technically trained personnel. All of these storage requirements are economically burdensome.

[0003] It has now been found according to the present invention that essential oils freshly extracted from botanical matter which then contain harsh flavor off-notes can be readily freed of such harsh flavor off-notes by treating the oil with a peroxide-acid reagent.

[0004] The peroxide-acid reagent which is used to treat the essential oils in accordance with the present invention is a combination of one or more water soluble inorganic peroxides such as hydrogen peroxide and/or ozone and one or more water soluble inorganic acids such as hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid and phosphoric acid. The peroxide is the active agent in the reagent system of the present invention. The acid is merely used to acidify the peroxide.

[0005] The peroxides and the acids are preferably employed as aqueous solutions having a peroxide or acid concentration of about 30 to 40 weight percent. Aqueous solutions of the peroxides and/ or acids having higher or lower concentrations may also be used.

[0006] The peroxide and acid components of the reagent are added together to the oil to be treated therewith, as disclosed below.

[0007] The essential oils which are to be treated with the peroxide-acid reagent in accordance with the present invention are the freshly extracted essential oils of botanical matter. These oils are used as flavorants in the food, confectionary, perfume and cosmetic industries. These oils would include those obtained from the following botanical materials: anise, basil, dill weed, chamomile, eucalyptus, fennel, geranium, hop, laurel leaf, lemongrass, bois de rose, caraway, amber, camphor, amyris, galbanum, davana, mentha (spearmint and peppermint).

[0008] The esential oils which are to be treated with the peroxide-acid reagent in accordance with the present invention may be extracted from their parent botanical matter, i.e., leaves, fruit, bark, root, grass, wood, heartwood, gum, balsam, berries, seed, flowers, twigs and buds, by the commonly employed technique for doing so, i.e., steam distillation.

[0009] U.S. 4,478,864 discloses the treatment of freshly prepared peppermint oil with maleic anhydride for the purposes of preventing the formation of certain off flavor notes during the aging process. This process removes most of the menthofuran from the fresh peppermint oil, in the form of a menthofuran-maleic anhydride complex. Thus, very little menthofuran is present, during the aging process, to oxidize to produce undesirable flavor notes. This process, however, does not cure all the off-flavor note problems inherent in fresh peppermint oil. An essential oil treated by the process of U.S. 4,478,864 may still have to undergo an aging process to remove off-flavor notes that are present in the freshly prepared oil.

[0010] Prior to all of the present inventors work, therefor, it has not been possible to treat freshly made essential oils in a facile manner so as to readily remove therefrom harsh flavor off-notes then present therein with a reagent that can be readily removed from the oil.

[0011] The present invention relates to a process for removing harsh flavor off-notes from the essential oil of a botanical material which comprises treating said oil with an acidified peroxide and/or ozone.

[0012] The fresh oil may be rectified (redistilled) prior to or after treatment with the peroxide-acid reagent to improve a particular property characteristic. For example, peppermint oil may be rectified to remove dimethyl sulfide therefrom which provides a green weedy note.

[0013] The harsh flavor off-notes in the fresh essential oils, which are to be removed by treatment with the peroxide-acid reagent, may be characterized, as such, organoleptically. Organoleptically these harsh off-flavor notes may be characterized as: harsh, green, raw, weedy, skunky and burnt.

[0014] The chemical components of the fresh essential oils which are believed responsible for the harsh (tasting) flavor off-notes have not been determined analytically. They are present, at most, at trace concentrations in the oil. When the essential oils are analyzed by gas chromatography prior to and after the treatment of the present invention, no apparent changes in the composition of the volatile components of the oil can be detected (analytically).

[0015] By volatile components it is meant those components of the oil which are volatile enough as to be capable of being detected by gas chromatography analysis using a Carbowax@-20M column operated at a maximum temperature of 230°C and with an injector temperature of a maximum of 250°C.

[0016] In treating the essential oil with the peroxide-acid reagent according to the present invention the oil may be extracted in a liquid/liquid extraction with the peroxide-acid reagent, or it may be contacted with the peroxide-acid reagent immobilized on a solid support.

[0017] About 0.005 to 2.0, and preferably about 0.01 to 0.03, percent by volume of each of the peroxide and the acid components of the reagent of the present invention is used in treating the oil therewith, when using the peroxides and acids as 30 to 40% by weight aqueous solutions.

[0018] The peroxide and acid components are added to the oil, for the purposes of conducting the treat- menttherewith of the present invention, by adding such components together. The acid is used to form an acidified peroxide.

[0019] The treatment with the peroxide-acid reagent may be conducted at room temperature, of about 20-25°C, although at higher temperatures a more rapid/efficient extraction may be effected. The liquid/liquid extraction may be done by vigorously shaking a mixture of the oil and the peroxide-acid reagent in commonly employed shaking devices designed to effect efficient liquid/liquid extraction systems. Depending on the amount of peroxide-acid reagent used, the size of the oil sample being extracted, and the amount of harsh flavor off-notes initially present in such sample, and the shaking device employed, the extraction time required may be about one to ten minutes.

[0020] Only one treatment of the oil with the peroxide-acid reagent is needed in order to adequately accomplish the removal of the harsh flavor off-notes. With such a treatment all of the harsh flavor notes are readily removed.

[0021] After the aqueous peroxide-acid reagent is used to treat the essential oil in the liquid/liquid extraction process, it is readily moved therefrom by the use of oil/water separating devices such as a separatory funnel, with or without prior centrifuging. Residual traces of the peroxide-acid reagent can be further readily extracted from the oil by treatment with a solution of Na2CO3 (to neutralize the acid) followed by washing with distilled water. The oil is then dried by high speed centrifugation.

[0022] Contrary to the teachings of U.S. 4,478,864, whereby the agent which would cause the creation of the off flavor note (upon aging in the oil) is actually removed from the fresh oil as a menthofuran-maleic anhydride complex, the agent(s) which are causing the off-flavor notes in the fresh oil, and which are treated with the peroxide-acid reagent according to the present invention, are not removed from the fresh oil by such treatment. The peroxide-acid reagent presumably oxidizes the agents causing the off-flavor notes in such a way as to then render them innocuous from an off-flavor point of view. Thus, it is not necessary to further age the fresh oil, as is otherwise commonly done, to accomplish the same result.

[0023] The treatment of the fresh essential oil with the peroxide-acid reagentcan be accomplished before or after any treatment of the oil according to the process of U.S. 4,478,864.

[0024] The various types of products into which the essential oils obtained by the present process may be added as flavors or fragrances would include food, confectionary, including chewing gum and pressed mints, perfumes, cosmetic and body hygiene products and medicinals.

[0025] The following examples are merely illustrative of the scope of the present invention and are not intended as a limitation upon the scope thereof.

Example 1



[0026] A 100 ml sample of freshly distilled peppermint oil is shaken, in a 250 ml separatory funnel, with 0.02 grams each of 30% by weight aqueous H202 and 12 N HCI for 1 to 2 minutes. The aqueous (bottom) layer is discarded after complete separation of the layers. The peppermint oil layer is washed by extraction with 2x50 ml 5% sodium carbonate solution and 2x50 ml distilled water, and the completely separated aqueous layer is then discarded. The oil is dried with 4 g anhydrous sodium sulfate and by centrifucation at 2000 to 3000 rpm.

[0027] The resulting oil is crystal clear and possesses a clean characteristic mellow aroma of a good quality aged peppermint oil. The harsh objectionable aroma of the starting oil is eliminated. The taste of the treated oil, when evaluated in a sugar fondant at 0.2 weight percent level and in a chewing gum at about a 0.5 to 1.5 weight percent level, is similarly improved from that of the starting oil.

Example 2



[0028] A sample of freshly distilled spearmint oil is also treated according to the procedure of Example 1. A similar improvement of the treated oil is noted.

[0029] The magnitude of improvement in a treated oil- depends on the quality of the starting oil; the more objectionable and the harsher the starting oil is, the more dramatic is the improvement obtained by the treatment thereof according to the present invention.


Claims

1. A process for removing harsh flavor off-notes from the essential oil of a botanical material by oxidation characterized in that said oil is treated with an acidified peroxide and/or ozone.
 
2. A process as in Claim 1 characterized in that the acidified peroxide and/or ozone is in the presence of at least one water soluble acid, and the peroxide is an inorganic peroxide.
 
3. A process as in Claim 1 or 2 characterized in that the peroxide is hydrogen peroxide.
 
4. A process as in any of Claims 1 to 3 characterized in that the acid is hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid or phosphoric acid.
 
5. A process as in any of Claims 1 to 4 characterized in that the acidified peroxide is hydrogen peroxide and the acid is hydrochloric acid.
 
6. A process as in any of Claims 1 to 5 characterized in that said essential oil is a mint oil, a peppermint oil, a spearmint oil or a distilled oil.
 
7. Use of an essential oil which was treated according to one of the Claims 1 to 6 for confectionary, food, cosmetic, perfume, body hygiene product or medical products.
 
8. Use according to Claim 7 wherein the confectionary is chewing gum, a candy or a pressed mint.
 


Ansprüche

1. Verfahren zum Entfernen von strengen unangehmen Geschmacksnoten aus dem essentiellen 01 eines botanischen Materials durch Oxidation, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß man das Öl mit einem angesäuerten Peroxid und/oder Ozon behandelt.
 
2. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das angesäuerte Peroxid und/oder Ozon in Gegenwart wenigstens einer wasserlöslichen Säure vorliegt, und daß das Peroxid ein anorganisches Peroxid ist.
 
3. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1 oder 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das Peroxid Wasserstoffperoxid ist.
 
4. Verfahren gemäß einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 3, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Säure Salzsäure, Schwefelsäure oder Phosphorsäure ist.
 
5. Verfahren gemäß einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 4, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das angesäuerte Peroxid Wasserstoffperoxid und die Säure Salzsäure ist.
 
6. Verfahren gemäß einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 5, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das essentielle Öl ein Minzöl, ein Pfefferminzöl, ein Spermintöl oder ein destilliertes Öl ist.
 
7. Verwendung eines gemäß einem der Ansprüche 1 bis 6 behandelten essentiellen Öls für Süßwaren, Nahrungsmittel, Kosmetika, Parfums, Körperhygieneprodukte oder medizinische Produkte.
 
8. Verwendung gemäß Anspruch 7, bei welcher die Süßware Kaugummi, ein Bonbon oder eine gepreßte Minze ist.
 


Revendications

1. Procédé pour éliminer par oxydation des notes de parfum étrangères âpres de l'huile essentielle d'un matériel botanique, caractérisé par le fait qu'on traite ladite huile essentielle par un peroxyde acidifié et/ou de l'ozone acidifié.
 
2. Procédé selon la revendication 1, caractérisé par le fait que le peroxyde acidifié et/ou l'ozone acidifié se trouvent en présence d'au moins un acide soluble dans l'eau, et que le peroxyde est un peroxyde organique.
 
3. Procédé selon l'une des revendications 1 et 2, caractérisé par le fait que le peroxyde est le peroxyde d'hydrogène.
 
4. Procédé selon l'une des revendications 1 à 3, caractérisé par le fait que l'acide est l'acide chlorhydrique, l'acide sulfurique ou l'acide phosphorique.
 
5. Procédé selon l'une des revendications 1 à 4, caractérisé par le fait que le peroxyde acidifié est le peroxyde d'hydrogène, et que l'acide est l'acide chlorhydrique.
 
6. Procédé selon l'une des revendications 1 à 5, caractérisé par le fait que ladite huile essentielle est une essence de menthe, une essence de menthe poivrée, une essence de menthe verte, ou une huile essentielle distillée.
 
7. Utilisation d'une huile essentielle qui a été traitée conformément au procédé tel que défini à l'une des revendications 1 à 6, dans des produits de confiserie, des produits alimentaires, des cosmétiques, des parfums, des produits d'hygiène corporelle ou des produits médicamenteux.
 
8. Utilisation selon la revendication 7, dans laquelle le produit de confiserie est un chewing- gum, un bonbon ou une menthe pressée.