Multivariate analysis of chemical markers to distinguish “Ceylon” and "Cassia” cinnamon in the Spanish market

Abstract

Cinnamon adulteration represents a significant threat to food authenticity, consumer health and market integrity. This study aimed to analyse the presence of Ceylon and Cassia cinnamon in supermarkets across the province of Alicante (Spain) and identify markers to distinguish these species using spectrophotometry, chromatography, and sensory analysis. Cinnamomum zeylanicum, was characterized by malic, butyric, sugars and monoterpenes, while C. cassia by aldehydes, sesquiterpenes and coumarin. C. zeylanicum was mainly associated with “citrus” aroma and high intensity, while C. cassia with “sweet” aroma. Four out of 52 volatiles (β-phellandrene, d-3- carene, cryptone, and eugenol) were exclusive to C. zeylanicum and 9 (limonene, eucalyptol, endo-fenchol, Δ-elemene, cyclosativene, 7-epi-sesquithujene, bisabolene, α-calacorene, and cadalene) were exclusive to C. cassia ground cinnamon. Multivariate analysis revealed that only one of the 16 ground cinnamon samples from the Spanish market closely resembled C. zeylanicum, one was a mix of both, and the remaining were identified as C. cassia.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

15

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in

Food Chemistry: X

Grant Agreement Number

FEDER/ / /EU/ /

Recommended citation

Lipan, Leontina, Marina Cano-Lamadrid, Hanán Issa-Issa, Carmen Muñoz, Francisca Hernández, Ángel Carbonell-Barrachina, and Esther Sendra. 2025. “Multivariate Analysis of Chemical Markers to Distinguish ‘Ceylon’ and "Cassia” Cinnamon in the Spanish Market.” Food Chemistry: X 28: 102484. doi: 10.1016/j.fochx.2025.102484

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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