Caramel is a widely used water-soluble food pigment. The acylation of caramel was conducted by aliphatic acyl chlorides with different chain lengths. Acetyl, butyryl, octyl, lauryl, palmityl, and stearyl caramels were prepared with the ratio of acyl chloride/caramel of 6. The formation of acylated caramel was confirmed by Fourier transform infrared spectra, and the acyl mass fraction in acylcaramel was determined by potentiometric titration. Thermal analysis showed that the weight loss of acylated caramel was higher than that of raw caramel. The scanning electron microscopy analysis showed that the morphology of acylated caramel was significantly different from that of raw material. The acyl mass fraction of acylated caramel increased with the increase of acyl chain lengths. Meanwhile, the lipo-hydro partition coefficient, the solubility in corn oil, and color, red, and yellow indexes increased with the increase of the mass fraction of acyl in acylcaramel. It was found that stearyl caramel has the highest lipid solubility of 5.73 mg/mL in corn oil; however, the color, red, and yellow indexes of palmityl caramel reached 25 818.60, 1.149, and 1.757, respectively. This study provides a method to improve the solubility of caramel in lipid phase and expand the application range of caramel.
Keywords: acylcaramel; characterization; lipo−hydro partition coefficient; preparation.