Stability of quercetin derivatives in vacuum impregnated apple slices after drying (microwave vacuum drying, air drying, freeze drying) and storage
Beate Schulze, Eva Maria Hubbermann, Karin Schwarz
LWT
Abstract
Microwave vacuum drying (MVD) was investigated for apple slices enriched with quercetin derivatives by vacuum impregnation (VI). Additional freeze drying (FD) and air drying (AD) were conducted. Compared to native apples, the impregnated tissue resulted in higher moisture content, elevation of weight and significant browning, due to the incorporated VI solution. The total quercetin content and quercetin glycoside composition were not affected by MVD and FD. The vacuum conditions protect the polyphenols from oxygen dependent degradation and browning reactions. AD resulted in an average quercetin glycoside loss of 44% and undesirable changes, particularly discoloration. The degradation is caused by both non-enzymatic and enzymatic reactions. The pulsed microwave energy intake improved the drying result in structure and led to a faster drying process of 130 min. The bulk density of MVD apple chips (0.69 g/ml) ranged between 0.33 g/ml for FD and 0.75 g/ml for AD. The final moisture content was the lowest after FD (6.8 g/100 g), followed by 9.0 g/100 g after MVD and 12.7 g/100 g after AD. The shelf life was significantly influenced by storage temperature and time. After 12 month at 20 °C, the total quercetin content decreased by 21%.
Extracted Claims
8 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
air drying (AD) result in 44% loss of quercetin glycoside and undesirable changes, particularly discoloration
“AD resulted in an average quercetin glycoside loss of 44% and undesirable changes, particularly discoloration”
storage at 20 °C for 12 months result in 21% decrease in total quercetin content
“After 12 month at 20 °C, the total quercetin content decreased by 21%”
pulsed microwave energy intake improve drying result in structure and lead to a faster drying process of 130 min
“The pulsed microwave energy intake improved the drying result in structure and led to a faster drying process of 130 min”