HMF is practically absent in fresh food, but it is naturally generated in sugar-containing food during heat-treatments like drying or cooking. Along with many other flavor- and color-related substances, HMF is formed in the
Maillard reaction as well as during
caramelization. In these foods it is also slowly generated during storage. Acid conditions favour generation of HMF. HMF is a well known component of baked goods. Upon toasting bread, the amount increases from 14.8 (5 min.) to 2024.8 mg/kg (60 min). It is a good
wine storage time−temperature marker, especially in
sweet wines such as
Madeira and those sweetened with grape concentrate
arrope. ''.
Cooktown, Queensland, Australia. The fruiting body contains
hydroxymethylfurfural. HMF can be found in low amounts in
honey, fruit-
juices and
UHT-milk. Here, as well as in vinegars, jams, alcoholic products or biscuits, HMF can be used as an indicator for excess heat-treatment. For instance, fresh honey contains less than 15 mg/kg—depending on pH-value and temperature and age, and the
codex alimentarius standard requires that honey have less than 40 mg/kg HMF to guarantee that the honey has not undergone heating during processing, except for tropical honeys which must be below 80 mg/kg. Higher quantities of HMF are found naturally in coffee and dried fruit. Several types of roasted coffee contained between 300 – 2900 mg/kg HMF. Dried plums were found to contain up to 2200 mg/kg HMF. In dark beer 13.3 mg/kg were found, bakery-products contained between 4.1 – 151 mg/kg HMF. It can be found in
glucose syrup. HMF can form in
high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), levels around 20 mg/kg HMF were found, increasing during storage or heating. This is a problem for American
beekeepers because they use HFCS as a source of sugar when there are not enough
nectar sources to feed
honeybees, and HMF is toxic to them. Adding bases such as soda ash or potash to
neutralize the HFCS slows the formation of HMF. Depending on production-technology and storage, levels in food vary considerably. To evaluate the contribution of a food to HMF intake, its consumption-pattern has to be considered. Coffee is the food that has a very high relevance in terms of levels of HMF and quantities consumed. HMF is a natural component in heated food but usually present in low concentrations. The daily intake of HMF may underlie high variations due to individual consumption-patterns. It has been estimated that the intakes range between 4 mg - 30 mg per person per day, while an intake of up to 350 mg can result from, e.g., beverages made from dried plums. ==Biomedical==