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Cultivar Effect on Moringa oleifera Glucosinolate Content and Taste: A Pilot Study

April 30, 2009
Ecology of Food and Nutrition

Beth Doerr , Kristina L. Wade , Katherine K. Stephenson , Stewart B. Reed & Jed W. Fahey

Leaves of the tropical tree Moringa oleifera are widely promoted in areas of chronic malnutrition as nutritional supplements for weaning infants and nursing mothers. Adoption, in these circumstances may hinge upon taste, which can vary greatly amongst cultivars. It is widely assumed that this taste variation is primarily germplasm-dependent, and results from the breakdown of glucosinolates to isothiocyanates. Leaves of 30 accessions, grown at a single field plot, were sampled 3 times over the course of a year. Taste, assessed in a masked protocol, was not related to glucosinolate content of the leaves.