Physical and storage properties of spray-dried blueberry pomace extract with whey protein isolate as wall material

Issue Date

9-2014

Abstract

In the food industry, attempts have been made to extract and encapsulate bioactives from pomace using organic solvents, e.g., ethanol. Ethanolic extracts contain high concentrations of bioactives, but encapsulation of them with whey proteins presents challenges arising from ternary phase equilibrium. This study aimed to prepare and characterize spray-dried powders made from blueberry pomace extract and whey proteins. The resulting microcapsules measured 48.5 μm in diameter, had 5% moisture content, and contained 1.32 mg cyanidin-3-O-glucoside (C3G), 2.83 mg gallic acid equivalents (GAE) and 48.52 nmol Fe (II) equivalents per gram powder. Sorption data obeyed Guggenheim-Anderson-De Boer isotherm. Storage tests revealed first-order degradation kinetics for monomeric anthocyanins, a two-fold increase in total phenolics and slight increase in antioxidant capacity. Exposure to light was comparable to storage at 37 °C, but slightly more severe in decomposing monomeric anthocyanins. The spray-dried encapsulated powder could be used as a suitable health-promoting food ingredient. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Source or Periodical Title

Journal of Food Engineering

ISSN

0260-8774

Volume

137

Page

1-6

Document Type

Article

Physical Description

figures, graphs

Language

English

Subject

Antioxidant capacity, Blueberries, Microencapsulation, Pomace, Storage, Whey protein isolate

Identifier

doi: 10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2014.03.034.

Digital Copy

yes

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