Title: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN HALAL FOOD ANALYSIS
1RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN HALAL FOOD ANALYSIS
YAAKOB B. CHE MAN, Ph.D INSTITUTE OF HALAL
FOOD Universiti Putra Malaysia
In conjuction with the Annual General Meeting of
MIFT, 20 May 2006, Subang Jaya, Selangor
2Introduction
- Increasing awareness of Muslim consumers on their
religious obligations creates greater demand for
halal food and other consumer goods - 2 billion Muslims out of gt 6.5 billion world
population - Majority are in OIC member countries
3Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC)
4Cont
- Trade in halal food is enormous - estimated
annual halal food value USD 347 (RM 1,317)
billion globally - Lucrative market and huge opportunities for halal
food business - domestic and international trade - Many companies are looking at halal concept as a
new tool for marketing
5Cont
- Halal is a Quranic term meaning permitted,
allowed or lawful. Halal when used in relation
to food and other consumer goods, means
permissible for consumption and used by Muslims - Haram is the opposite of halal.
-
- Shubhah or Mashbooh, means doubtful or suspected
- Halal and haram are serious matters in Islam
6Cont
The lives of every Muslims, including their
dietary requirements, are guided by Shariah Law
- Shariah Law means Islamic Law based on the Quran,
Hadith, Ijma and Qiyas - A particular food or other consumer product
becomes halal or haram if it is considered so
through any one of the above mentioned sources
or Fatwa (religious rulings) issued by competent
Islamic Authorities.
7Al Quran Surah Al-Baqarah
O ye people! Eat of what is on earth, Halal and
good and do not follow the footsteps of the Evil
One, for he is to you an avowed enemy. (Verse
168)
8Al-Quran Surah Al-Maidah
O ye who believe! Forbid not the good thing
which Allah hath made Halal for you, and
transgress not. Lo Allah loveth not
transgressors. Eat of that which Allah hath
bestowed on you as food Halal and Good, and keep
your duty to Allah in Whom ye are believers.
(verse 87 88)
9Hadith Bukhari and Muslim
- Halal is clear and Haram is clear in
between these two are certain things that are
shubhah (suspected). Many people may not know
whether those items are Halal or Haram. Whosoever
leaves them, he is innocent towards his religion
and his conscience. He is, therefore, safe.
Anyone who gets involved in any of these
suspected items, he may fall into the unlawful
and the prohibition. This case is similar to the
one who wishes to raise his animals next to a
restricted area, he may step into it. Indeed for
every landlord there is a restricted area. Indeed
the restrictions of Allah are the unlawful
(Haram).
10Cont
- Ensuring food and other consumer products
authentically halal is obligatory for every
Muslims - Hence, certification and verification of every
item for halal compliance by competent Islamic
Authorities, such as JAKIM, is extremely
important
11 Halal Food Production - From Farm to Table
Farm
Raw material Animal Plant
Processing
Handling e.g. slaughtering
Ingredient Additive
Handling
Processing/Unit Operations Preliminary
operation Conversion operation Preservation
operation Product development
Packaging
Storage Distribution
Storage
Consumption
Transportation
12IIssues in
Halal Food Production
- Issues in Halal Food Production
- Raw materials animal or plant origin/imported
- Slaughtering according to Shariah/stunning
- Processing operations/equipment x-contamination
- Packaging/Storage/Transportation (containers and
vessels) - Food ingredients and additives
- Pig and its by-products (e.g. pork, lard,
gelatin) - Enzymes (e.g rennet)
- Emulsifiers (e.g. E471 or mono- diglycerides)
- Alcohol (ethanol)
- Biotechnology and GMOs (genetically modified
organisms) - Safety and quality aspects (aspect of Thoyyiba)
13Cont
- Halal is not just end-product certification but
involves approval of all ingredients and all food
processing at every stage of the production
from farm to table concept -
-
14Cont
- Due to breathtaking technological development
today and the diversification of sources acquired
globally for food processing and production -
various kinds of processed foods are available in
the market - It is very challenging and increasingly difficult
for Muslims to ensure halal status of food in the
market - This trend has raised concerns among Muslim
consumers regarding new processed food
15Cont
- Food is only halal if the entire food chain, from
farm to plate, is processed, handled and stored
in accordance to Shariah or Islamic Guidelines,
e.g MS15002004, JAKIMs Guidelines, Codex
Alimentarious etc. -
16Adulteration of Food
- Adulteration is an issue of major concern in the
food industry globally - Adulteration of value-added food products -
involving the replacement of high cost
ingredients with lower grade and cheaper
substitutes - Adulteration of food products can be very
attractive and lucrative for food manufacturers
or raw material suppliers
17Adulteration with Porcine-based Products
- In some countries, food manufacturers choose to
blend vegetable fats with lard to reduce
production cost - Lard could be effectively blended with other
vegetable oils to produce shortening, margarines
and other specialty food oils - In other instances, adulteration with porcine
products could be unintentional
18Al-Quran Surah 2 Verse 173
- He has only forbidden you dead meat, and
blood, and the flesh of swine and that on which
any other name hath been invoked besides that of
Allah. But if one is forced by necessity, without
willful disobedience, nor transgressing due
limits, - then is he guiltless. For Allah is
oft-forgiving, most merciful.
19Cont
- Many fraudulent and deception cases reported
worldwide involving adulteration of haram
ingredients in halal food (especially
porcine-based products), misuse of halal label,
etc - E.g. In the U.K., Food Standards Agency conducted
test for adulteration and authenticity of chicken
using ELISA and DNA-PCR methods. - Test including samples with halal label revealed
that chicken were adulterated with pig
derivatives
20Recent Issues of Processed Halal Food Fraud in
Malaysia
- Non-halal (pork) moon cakes with halal logo
- Pigs and chicken stored together
- Issue on bread using lard
- Brushes using pigs bristle (fur) in cake and
bread preparation - Minced pork with halal label
- Sausages with non-halal casing, expired halal
certificate and old halal logo - etc
21Cont
- In the past, many Muslims may have consumed
processed food claimed to be halal but
adulterated with non-halal ingredients and
additives - Food producers/manufacturers/food service
providers should be more sensitive and
responsible to label their products.
22Challenges in Halal Food Analysis
- Halal food is sensitive and serious matter to
Muslim - With many fraudulent issues around, more
stringent monitoring should be established by the
Islamic Authorities. - Authentication and verification for halal has
become one of a major challenges in analysis of
processed food - At present, very limited analytical methods
available for halal food verification - Rapid and reliable methods are urgently needed
for detection of non-halal components (e.g
porcine origin) in food products
23Cont
- Currently, Chemistry Department (MOSTI) is the
official laboratory doing all halal food analysis - Received request for halal verification from
various quarters - JAKIM
- KPDNHEP
- Ministry of Health
- Jabatan Agama Islam Negeri
- Private companies
- etc
24Cont
- Current Methods of Analysis used for Halal Food
Authentication - DNA-Polymerase Chain Reaction
- DNA-sequencing
- Gas Chromatography FAC/FAME and TAG Analysis
- Microscopic determinations
- Chemical Testing
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26New Initiatives on Halal Food Analysis
- JAKIMs Halal Laboratories
- UPMs Halal Food Institute
- National Reference Laboratory for Halal Products
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28Institute of Halal Food, UPM
- Approved by Ministry of Higher Education and
officially set up in 1 June 2005 in UPM
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32Cont
- Objectives
- to carry out R D on halal food production
- to develop new methods for halal food analysis
- to provide professional services on halal food
related matters - to actively contribute together with other
agencies towards achieving Malaysias vision to
be a Global Halal Food Hub
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36Cont
- IMH developed several new analytical approaches
for detection of halal food adulteration - Since porcine-based products are widely used in
food and is the biggest issue in halal food, we
are developing techniques for detecting pork and
lard in some food items claimed to be halal
37Development of Potential Methods for Detection
and Monitoring of Halal Food
- Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy
- Electronic Nose (E-nose) technology
- Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC)
- Molecular Biology techniques
38FTIR Spectroscopy
- Food samples (chocolate, cake, biscuits) were
analyzed to identify the differences in FTIR
spectra profiles - FTIR technique combined with chemometric analysis
was able to detect and quantify the level of lard
adulterated in food samples (3 detection limit) - Offers rapid (results in 2 min), simple,
accurate, reliable, and environmental friendly
tool
39Expended view of region 990-950 cm-1
0.500
b
0.45
0.40
0 lard 20 lard 40 lard 60 lard 80 lard 100
lard
0.35
0.30
Absorbance (A)
0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.05
0.030
1018.0
1010
1000
990
980
970
960
950
940
929.0
Wavenumber (cm-1)
40FTIR Calibration Model
41Electronic Nose (E-nose) Technology
- An instrument, which comprises an array of
electronic chemical sensors and appropriate
pattern recognition system, capable of
recognizing simple or complex odor or smell - This technique was applied to monitor the
presence of lard in food sample such as cooking
oil - Qualitative identification of adulterated oil is
possible by the characteristic 2-dimensional
olfactory images called VaporPrint TM
42SAW detector response vs time. Pure RBD palm
olein (pink) overlay with RBD palm olein
adulterated with 5 lard (black)
43VaporPrintTM
44Cont
- E-nose is an interesting alternative choice which
offer easier operation, rapid determination (1
min), and give reliable results - It is possible to detect any adulteration with
the characteristic aroma fingerprint of each
sample (1 detection level) - This electronic nose could fulfil the need for
rapid detection of lard adulteration in food
45Differential Scanning Calorimetry
- Thermoanalytical technique for monitoring changes
in physical or chemical properties of material by
detecting the heat changes - Thermogram profile show the presence of lard in
food sample - Relatively simple, accurate and minimum amount of
sample needed
46DSC Thermogram
47DNA-based technique
- DNA technique is a favorite approach for species
identification because DNA is relatively stable
even after processing - We developed method for species identification
from pork and lard samples using PCR analysis of
a conserved region in the mt cyt b gene - The analysis yielded excellent results for
identification of pig species in samples
48SPECIES IDENTIFICATION
FOOD SAMPLES
DNA EXTRACTION
PCR-RFLP
PCR AMPLIFICATION
49 M1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 10
11 12 13 14 M2
M1 100bp Ladder Marker 1 Muttons meat 2
Cows meat (beef) 3 Chickens meat 4, 5, 6, 7
Pigs meat (pork) 10 Chickens fat 11, 12, 13,
14 Pigs fat M2 1kb Plus Marker
360bp 228bp 131bp
Restriction Enzyme Analysis of PCR Amplified
Cytochrome b Gene (raw meat and fat samples)
50M A1 A2 A3 D1
D2 D3 K1 K2 P1
P2
500 bp
360 bp
228 bp
131 bp
M-1Kb DNA ladder A1, A2 and A3- sosej ayam
berlainan jenama D1, D2 and D3- sosej daging
lembu berlainan jenama K1 and K2- sosej babi
berlainan jenama P1 and P2- sosej yang tidak
dikenalpasti
Restriction Enzyme Analysis of PCR Amplified
Cytochrome b Gene (sausages)
51Protein-based technique
- ELISA is used to determine the level of
antibodies in a sample and useful because they
are specific and are relatively simple to
perform. - We developed method for detection of pig
derivatives qualitatively in the food samples
using ELISA technique - The analysis yielded excellent results for
detection of pig derivatives in samples
52ELISA Results
1 2 3 4 5
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
A1- positive control B1 and C1- negative
controls D1- mutton, E1- beef F1- chicken
meat, G1, H1, A2 and B2-pork C2- mutton fat
D2- beef fat E2- chicken fat F2, G2, H2, A3-
lard B3, C3 and D3- chicken sausages with
different brands
E3, F3 and G3- beef sausages with different
brands H3 and A4- pork sausages with different
brands B4 and C4- unknown sausages D4, E4 and
F4- unknown casings G4, H4, A5 and B5- bread
with different brands
C5 and D5- biscuits with different brands E5-
homemade biscuit with 1 lard F5- homemade
biscuit with 50 lard G5- homemade biscuits
with 100 lard.
53Conclusion
- Halal and haram are sensitive and serious matters
to every Muslim - Properly processed and certified halal food is
pertinent to capture the lucrative halal food
market - Adulteration and contamination of non-halal
components are major concern in food processing
and production
54 Cont
- Development on methods of detection adulteration
are urgently needed for halal food verification
and certification - New analytical methods of analysis developed by
our research group is simple, rapid and reliable
for detection of pork and lard in food and
other consumer products - These analytical methods have potential to be
utilised by halal food authorities responsible
for authentication of halal food such as JAKIM
55Cont
- We hope these advances would contribute to the
credibility of Malaysian Halal Certification
Programme
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64THANK YOU WASSALAM