https://www.selleckchem.com/products/CHIR-258.html Free sucrose, lactose, galactose, glucose and fructose were determined in yoghurts, milk and honey using on-line coupling of capillary electrophoresis with microdialysis. The dairy products were diluted 50-fold with 10 mmol/L NaOH and sampled using laboratory-made microdialysis probes. The microdialysate was brought to the entrance of the electrophoretic capillary and the coupling consisted in a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) cross connector working in the flow-gating interface regime. The electrophoretic analysis was performed in 50 mmol/L NaOH (pH 12.6) background electrolyte, where baseline separation of the five saccharides was achieved in 3.5 min. The LOQs varied in the range 2.3-7.3 mg/L, the number of separation plates varied between 176,000 plates/m for glucose to 326,000 plates/m for galactose and the relative standard deviation (RSD) for ten consecutive analyses of fruit yoghurt was 0.2% for the migration time and 4.4-7.6% for the peak area. The debittering of natural table olives is a very slow process. The effect of acetic, lactic and citric acids on the hydrolysis rate of oleuropein was studied in vitro and at pilot plant scale. The acid hydrolysis of oleuropein was faster with lactic and citric acids than acetic acid, running the experiments at the same pH of 3.8-4.0 units. The temperature exerted a high effect of the hydrolysis of oleuropein in a range of 10-30 °C and the concentration of the organic acid did not show a significant trend. Moreover, the in vitro results were confirmed with three lots of olives that presented a higher content of oleuropein after 3-7 months of preservation when they were processed with acetic acid rather than lactic acid and the opposite for hydroxytyrosol. These results open the possibility of accelerating the debittering of natural olives by preserving them with lactic acid instead of acetic acid. This study evaluated structural and technological properties of beef emulsi