Preliminary study of the influence of mineral content on quality parameters of Jordanian-origin honey collected from different geographical regions

J Food Sci Technol. 2019 Nov;56(11):4817-4825. doi: 10.1007/s13197-019-03942-z. Epub 2019 Aug 2.

Abstract

In this work, physicochemical properties of eight honey samples harvested from different regions over Jordan were investigated. Quality parameters including free acidity, pH, conductivity, 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (5-HMT) and diastase activity were monitored for freshly harvested samples and during storage time over 24-month. The level of minerals (Na, K, Mg, Ca, Fe, Ni, Cu, Hg, Pb and As) in samples were quantified and found to be highly variable. The combined mineral content in the collected honeys was following the trend: multi-floral-Madaba (275.17 mg/kg) < multi-floral-Southern Shouna (600.83 mg/kg) < Centaurea iberica-Irbid (654.42 mg/kg) < Ziziphus Spina Christi-Al-Ghour (747.14 mg/kg) < Urginea maritima-Petra (752.52 mg/kg) < Echinopspolyceras-Karak (830.41 mg/kg) < Eucalyptus-Al-Azraq (1117.1 mg/kg) < multi-floral-Jerash (2297.57 mg/kg). As indicated from the trend, the mineral content in multi-floral-Jerash was notably high even when compared with international values. Harmful elements such as Cu, Hg, Pb and As were not detected providing higher nutritional value for the local honey. For fresh honeys, analysis revealed that samples rich with minerals have lower moisture, higher acidity, lower pH, and lower diastase activity. After 24-month storage, samples of higher minerals manifested higher values of 5-HMF and this supported that minerals would speed up glucose conversion.

Keywords: Jordanian honey; Pollution index; Quality-indicating parameters.