Saturday, August 22, 2009

Cornmint Oil

Cornmint Oil
Mentha arvensis. About 7,100 tons of cornmint oil (sometimes incorrectly called Chinese peppermint oil) are produce annually.

It is almost al converted into menthol (2,800 tons) and dementholized oil (4,300 tons).

China accounts for around 65% of the world production and India accounts for most of the remainder.

Dried plants yield 2,5% oil by steam distillation.

Cheap synthetic menthol has reduced the demand for cornmint oil into the main markets in the United States, Western Europe and Japan.

The major quantitative components of the dementholized oil typically:

35% laevo menthol
30% laevo menthone
8% iso-menthone
5% limonene
3% laevo menthyl acetate
3% piperitone
1% octan -3-ol

Cornmint oil contains about 1% of pulegone which is suspected of being toxic.

The raw oils are rectified to remove some of the front and back fractions. Careful blending of fractions can reduce the characteristically harsh odor of cornmint oil but it still remains much less attractive than peppermint oil. Adulteration of cornmint oil is not a commercially attractive proposition.

Most cornmint oils are used to give cheap peppermint flavor to a wide range of application, often blended with true peppermint oil. It is more frequently used in blended flavors that peppermint oil because of its price advantage.
Cornmint Oil

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