Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8946215 | LWT - Food Science and Technology | 2018 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
This study shows the effects of blanching, citric acid addition, and drying temperature on the freeze-drying kinetics, l-ascorbic acid content, colour, and antioxidant activity of freeze-dried pepper. The process was performed at 20â¯Â°C, 40â¯Â°C, and 60â¯Â°C and with a constant pressure in a drying chamber at 63â¯Pa. The samples of pepper were pulped before drying. Blanching of pepper reduced the drying time to approximately 30%. The shortest drying time (about 290â¯min) was found for blanched pepper that was freeze-dried at 60â¯Â°C, whereas the samples of pepper freeze-dried at 20â¯Â°C and without blanching required the longest drying time (about 900â¯min). The kinetics of freeze-drying of pepper pulp are best described by using the Page model. The addition of citric acid increased the redness and yellowness of dried pepper, whereas an increase in drying temperature caused a decrease in the total phenolics content, antioxidant activity, and colour coordinates of all samples. The highest l-ascorbic acid content was found in unblanched pepper and when the temperature of drying did not exceed 40â¯Â°C. Water blanching pretreatment had the most negative effect on total phenolics content and antioxidant activity of dried pepper.
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Authors
Andrzej Krzykowski, Dariusz Dziki, StanisÅaw Rudy, Urszula Gawlik-Dziki, Renata Polak, Beata Biernacka,