4.7 Article

Promoting the preservation of strawberry by supercritical CO2 drying

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 397, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2022.133789

Keywords

Strawberry; Supercritical drying; Carbon dioxide; Microbial inactivation; Nutritional evaluation

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This study investigated the effects of supercritical CO2 drying on strawberries. The results showed that the process conditions significantly affected the weight loss, water activity, and enzymatic inactivation. Under certain conditions, efficient drying and complete enzymatic inactivation can be achieved. Moreover, the dried strawberries maintained their vitamin C, anthocyanin, and flavonoid content, and had a sterilizing effect against foodborne pathogens. Overall, this low temperature drying process has great potential for producing healthy and safe snacks.
This work aimed to investigate the supercritical CO2 (ScCO2) drying of strawberries and its effect on enzymatic, chemical and microbial stability.Process conditions influenced the final weight loss (WL), water activity (a(w)) and the inactivation of polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD). At 40 ?, an efficient drying (WL > 92 %, a(w) < 0.34) and a complete enzymatic (POD and PPO activity) inactivation can be achieved using several combinations of pressure, time and flow rate. ScCO2 dried strawberry at 40 ?, 13.3 MPa, 7 h and 19 kg/h flow rate maintain the total content of Vitamin C (358.5 mg/100 g), 95 % of total anthocyanin (61.68 mg/100 g) and 76 % of total flavonoids (25.85 mg/100 g) in comparison with fresh samples. Foodborne pathogens (E.coli O157:H7, Salmonella enterica and Listeria monocytogenes) inoculated at high concentration (>= 6 log CFU/g) were undetected after the process. Overall results are promising for the development of a novel low temperature drying process for the production of healthy and safe snack.

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