Purification of Citrus Peel Juice and Molasses
Karel Grohmann, John A. Manthey, Randall G. Cameron, Béla S. Buslig
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Abstract
Citrus peel juice and molasses are extremely bitter and unpalatable byproducts of orange and grapefruit juice production. Major components of interest are soluble sugars, glucose, fructose, and sucrose, which account for 60-70% of the dry solids. Analyses indicate that the remaining components are suspended tissue fragments, proteins, organic acids, mineral ions, phenolic compounds, and polyols. A purification sequence that removed a majority of bitter limonoids and phenolic compounds by adsorption on nonionic, macroporous resins was tested. Residual phenolic compounds were removed by adsorption on activated carbon or anion-exchange resin, which also removed anions of organic and inorganic acids. Taste panel results suggested that debittered products could be acceptable for food uses.
Extracted Claims
3 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
anions of organic and inorganic acids are removed by anion-exchange resin
“anion-exchange resin, which also removed anions of organic and inorganic acids”
phenolic compounds are removed by adsorption on activated carbon or anion-exchange resin
“Residual phenolic compounds were removed by adsorption on activated carbon or anion-exchange resin”
limonoids and phenolic compounds are removed by adsorption on nonionic, macroporous resins
“A purification sequence that removed a majority of bitter limonoids and phenolic compounds by adsorption on nonionic, macroporous resins was tested”