Checkoff-Funded Better Bean Initiative Continues Search
for a Healthier Soybean
News release, United Soybean Board
ST. LOUIS (November 5, 2003) – Soybeans harvested
this month in Michigan may provide a healthier, more flavorful oil for
the food industry. The new variety, developed at Iowa State University,
has the potential to reduce the need to hydrogenate the oil from the
soybeans. Hydrogenation produces the trans fats found in certain foods,
which many researchers believe can lead to heart disease. Through the
soybean checkoff-funded Better Bean Initiative (BBI), the oil produced
by the new soybean variety will be made available to food companies
to evaluate following harvest.
“A primary objective of the BBI is to develop new
soybean varieties with enhanced compositional traits that meet the needs
of end users,” explains USB Chairman David Durham, a soybean farmer
from Hardin, Mo. “The soybean checkoff will be working with end
users such as food companies to test this promising new oil.”
The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) recently
announced new regulations that will require food companies to list the
amount of trans-fatty acids in foods on package nutrition labels by
2006.
“The new regulations set by the FDA add a greater
sense of urgency to develop soybean varieties that produce an oil that
leads to fewer trans fats in foods,” said Durham. “We’re
eager to hear the results of food companies’ testing of the oil.”
The new variety produces soybean oil with 1 percent linolenic
acid, the fatty acid most vulnerable to oxidation, which often results
in an unusual flavor in food products. To avoid flavor instability,
food companies often use hydrogenation to reduce the linolenic acid
content of the oil. Unfortunately, hydrogenation produces trans fats.
“Tests conducted on the oil last year indicate
that it provides the same flavor stability as partially hydrogenated
oil,” said Walter Fehr, Ph.D., Iowa State University and lead
researcher responsible for the development of the new variety. “Thanks
to the support of the soybean checkoff, about 200,000 pounds of the
1 percent linolenic oil will be available for evaluation by major food
companies. These tests will include taste testing and other evaluations
to ensure that the 1 percent linolenic oil does not alter the flavor
or consistency of the food products.”
According to Fehr, 18 grower cooperatives and companies
are preparing to produce enough seed to plant 1 million acres of the
1 percent linolenic soybeans in 2005. “These cooperatives and
companies include many farmers who are looking for a way to add value
to their crop,” said Fehr.
The checkoff-funded evaluation of the new soybean oil is not the first
BBI effort to find a healthier soybean. In 2001, a new variety developed
by the BBI was harvested in limited quantities in North Carolina. This
variety had the potential to significantly reduce the level of saturated
fat and trans-fatty acids in processed soybean oil. While this first
BBI variety was an improvement in certain areas, more research was needed
to meet food industry specifications.
USB is made up of 61 farmer-directors who oversee the
investments of the soybean checkoff on behalf of all U.S. soybean farmers.
As stipulated in the Soybean Promotion, Research and Consumer Information
Act, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has oversight responsibilities
for USB and the soybean checkoff.