Fr. 116.00

Functional Foods and Nutraceuticals

English · Hardback

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Description

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"Functional food or medicinal food is any fresh or processed food claimed to have a health-promoting and/or disease-preventing property beyond the basic nutritional function of supplying nutrients, although there is no consensus on an exact definition of the term.
This is an emerging field in food science, in which such foods are usually accompanied by health claims for marketing purposes, such as a company's 'cereal is a significant source of fiber. Studies have shown that an increased amount of fiber in one's diet can decrease the risk of certain types of cancer in individuals.'
Functional foods are sometimes called nutraceuticals, a portmanteau of nutrition and pharmaceutical, and can include food that has been genetically modified. The general category includes processed food made from functional food ingredients, or fortified with health-promoting additives, like "vitamin-enriched" products, and also fresh foods (e.g., vegetables) that have specific claims attached. Fermented foods with live cultures are often also considered to be functional foods with probiotic benefits."

List of contents

Part I: Nutrient Components of Food.- 1. Bioactive Carbohydrates.- 2. Bioactive Lipids.- 3. Bioactive Proteins.- 4. Bioactive Polyphenols and Carotenoids.- Part II: Specific Functional Foods.- 5. Soybean.- 6. Fruits and vegetables.- 7. Milk and Milk Products.- 8. Fish.- 9. Miscellaneous Foods and Food Components.

About the author

Dr. Rotimi Aluko has earned a PhD in Food Chemistry from the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada and is currently a Professor of Human Nutritional Sciences at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. He has continued to maintain an active research program on functional foods with an emphasis on food protein-derived bioactive peptides.     

Summary

"Functional food or medicinal food is any fresh or processed food claimed to have a health-promoting and/or disease-preventing property beyond the basic nutritional function of supplying nutrients, although there is no consensus on an exact definition of the term.
This is an emerging field in food science, in which such foods are usually accompanied by health claims for marketing purposes, such as a company's ‘cereal is a significant source of fiber. Studies have shown that an increased amount of fiber in one's diet can decrease the risk of certain types of cancer in individuals.’
Functional foods are sometimes called nutraceuticals, a portmanteau of nutrition and pharmaceutical, and can include food that has been genetically modified. The general category includes processed food made from functional food ingredients, or fortified with health-promoting additives, like "vitamin-enriched" products, and also fresh foods (e.g., vegetables) that have specific claims attached. Fermented foods with live cultures are often also considered to be functional foods with probiotic benefits."

Product details

Authors Rotimi Aluko, Rotimi E Aluko, Rotimi E. Aluko
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.07.2012
 
EAN 9781461434795
ISBN 978-1-4614-3479-5
No. of pages 155
Weight 490 g
Illustrations XII, 155 p.
Series Food Science Texts Series
Food Science Text Series
Food Science Text Series
Food Science Texts Series
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Technology > Chemical engineering

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