This review, which will be presented in seven parts is concerned with the use of rapeseed meal as an animal feeding stuff. The presence of glucosinolates in the meal limits its use due to a number of antinutritional and physiological effects. Whilst not in itself exhaustive, this review updates earl
Production of Low-Glucosinolate Rapeseed Meals
✍ Scribed by Mukherjee, K. D. ;Afzalpurkar, A. B. ;Nockrashy, A. S. El
- Book ID
- 102932374
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1976
- Weight
- 629 KB
- Volume
- 78
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0931-5985
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Defatted meals were prepared from conventional rapeseed, B. napus, Diamant, and from two new varieties of rapeseed, B. napus, Erglu and Lesira by the following processes: 1) Successive extraction or countercurrent extraction of myrosinase‐deactivated ground rapeseed with 70% aqueous acetone for the removal of glucosinolates followed by defatting using pure acetone; 2) Autolysis of ground rapeseed by the action of heat, moisture and myrosinase for the decomposition of glucosinolates followed by defatting using hexane with simultaneous removal of the decomposition products of glucosinolates. Both processes yield low‐glucosinolate rapeseed meals having favorable nutritional properties. Especially, the process involving autolysis is simple and inexpensive in which practically none of the proteins are lost. This process can be easily adapted to the conventional processing of rapeseed.
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## Abstract This study attempted to find out whether the low content of glucosinolates in the seed of the rapeseed cultivar Bronowski significantly affects the nutritional value of the seed meal. Glucosinolates were extracted from unheated meal with cold acetone, a process giving rise to only a sli