Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Horseradish: Kick ass chemistry

I like horseradish. It is used in cocktail sauce, spicy mustards, wasabi sauces and Arby's horsey sauce.

Several years ago I planted horseradish in my backyard. Horseradish is essentially a weed and grows with little attention. During October, the roots can be harvested and ground up into a most delightful condiment. I recently did that.

Here's the dirty roots:
Here they are after cleaning. One of them (top left) has been peeled:

I do everything outside so I don't die from the strong fumes. Using a food processor, I grind up the roots and add enough water to make a grindable paste. This is when the odor gets strong. To stop the enzymatic action (see below) I add a few tablespoon of a 5% aqueous acetic acid solution (vinegar) and bottle it. Here is the prepared horseradish:

Yes, I made a quart and a half. That's a lot.

So, what about the chemistry? Glad you asked.

Horseradish is not pungent until you start destroying cell walls. When that happens, enzymes are released and they go into action and start breaking down glucosinolates. The result is a number of compounds in the isothiocyanate class such as allylisothiocyanate and 2-phenyl ethyl isothiocyanate as shown:



These compounds are noxious and irritating.

But, they also have a special place in my heart. I used isothiocyanates regularly in my graduate work. I spent some time functionalizing amino terminated dendrimers with isothiocyanates. What is great about the isothiocyanate group is that it reacts exclusively with amino groups in the presence of alcohols. The isothiocyanate is tuned just right to react with the more nucleophilic N instead of the less nucleophilic O. Cool (see above and ignore the misspelled isothiocyanate).


14 comments:

MJenks said...

No mention of my favorite enzyme, horseradish peroxidase?

Maybe I've been in industry too long and am too impressed by glowy things.

Chemgeek said...

Yeah, I was going to include that, but I ran out of time before I had to run.

I've utilized the ol' peroxidase activity many a time.

Ψ*Ψ said...

i'm not usually a fan of spicy things, but wasabi is different. maybe because it's quick (LIKE A NINJA) :)

Joy said...

> These compounds are noxious and irritating.
Will...not...make...obvious...comment....

Gwen said...

My eyes watered just reading this. And now I want to make cocktail sauce.

~E said...

Have you ever thought about going into TV? Alton Brown can use the competition.

Chemgeek said...

E, nice of you to say, but as I like to say:

I've got a face for radio,
I've got a speaking voice for print media
and I've got the writing style to just shut the hell up.

Cindy said...

nice check out my guide on homebrew
---->How to make Beer at Home

Dr Zibbs said...

As a horseradish fan that's very interesting.

tohan gib said...

This ia always helpful for people who just want their chemistry work done. This link is perfect for studnets who want their homework done. So have this service now.

martin said...

The toughest subject to follow. We always need some kind of help that can ease that the burden of chemistry assignment. We just need to have http://www.graduateschoolpersonalstatement.net/is-graduate-school-personal-statement-500-words-length-sufficient/ for the betterment of their writing at school.

yashlittle said...

This page is best for science students. In this site, science students will get detail information about chemistry and atoms and their structure. We should notice it while making assignments.

Anonymous said...

This is terrible subject and we all have caught here. Online services are best for students so admire their efforts and get
http://www.personalstatementwritingservices.net/personal-statement-sample/ for writing purposes.

mitchelle Cook said...

Our https://www.capstonepaper.net/masters-capstone-paper-writing-services/ is best for post-graduate students. In this article, we have bundle of capstone project ideas for every programms.