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C02069 Investigation of the formation of PAHs in foods prepared in the home and from catering outlets to determine the effects of frying, grilling, barbecuing, toasting and roasting

Friday 6 June 2008

Background

Cooking techniques such as grilling and barbecuing can result in the presence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in food. Direct contact with flames or very high cooking temperatures may result in the formation of PAHs on the food itself. Pyrolysis of fat dripping from food onto hot charcoal, or a similar heat source, can also be a significant source of PAHs in grilled or barbecued food.

Research Approach

The effects of frying, grilling, roasting, toasting, using domestic cooking appliances, and barbecuing, will be investigated by carrying out controlled cooking experiments for a range of foods including sausages, beef burgers, beef, chicken and salmon. The effects of different types of fuel will be systematically investigated for the barbecuing experiments. PAH levels in pre-cooked food samples from retail or catering outlets will also be tested. 28 PAHs, including the 16 PAHs identified as mutagenic/genotoxic by the European Food Safety Authority will be analysed by gas chromatography.

Results and findings

None of the controlled cooking experiments using domestic cooking appliances caused significant PAH formation in food but barbecuing did result in raised PAH levels to varying degrees depending on the type of food and fuel and the cooking duration.

Overall, barbecued beef burgers contained the highest levels of PAHs, with benzo(a)pyrene concentrations of up to 29 ppb. By comparison, benzo(a)pyrene concentrations were 17- to 125- times greater than in beef steak. For all food types except burgers, barbecuing over charcoal plus wood-chips resulted in the highest PAH concentrations. For example, the maximum benzo(a)pyrene concentration in sausages barbecued over charcoal plus wood chips was about 10-fold greater than for sausages cooked over charcoal alone.

The majority of the pre-cooked retail samples contained low PAH concentrations. However PAH levels were raised in three beef burger samples from catering outlets.

Key Findings

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