4.3 Article

Effects of different cooking techniques on the carotenoids composition, phenolic contents, and antioxidant activity of spinach leaves

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11694-023-01962-0

Keywords

Spinach; Carotenoids; Boiling; Frying; Thawing; Microwaving; Sonication

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Leafy vegetables like spinach contain various health-promoting compounds that can be affected by different cooking techniques. This study investigated how boiling, frying, microwaving, thawing, and sonication affect the composition of carotenoids and other bioactive compounds in spinach leaves. The results showed that the carotenoid content in spinach was influenced by the different treatment methods, with boiling and microwave heating leading to an increase in certain carotenoids, while frying had a negative effect. Treated samples also showed variations in phenolic, flavonoid, anthocyanin contents, and DPPH scavenging activity, with frying, thawing, microwave, and sonication treatments showing different levels of retention.
Leafy vegetables contain several health-promoting compounds including carotenoids and polyphenols. Different cooking techniques have been shown to affect the composition of these compounds. In this study, spinach leaves were studied using different processing methods i.e., boiling, frying, microwaving, thawing, and sonication. Total phenolic, flavonoid, and anthocyanin contents and DPPH scavenging activity were measured in both treated and control spinach samples. HPLC with DAD was used to study carotenoid contents. It has been found that processing treatments affect the carotenoid contents of spinach and it depends on the type of treatment. The concentration of violaxanthin, lutein, and beta-carotene has been increased during boiling and microwave heating while frying has a very adverse effect on these compounds. The amount of lutein increased in all the treatments except in frying. Frying spinach leave kept a higher level of total phenolic or anthocyanin contents than other treatments. Similarly, TFCs have been retained better in thawing than with the other treatments. Similarly, microwave and sonication samples showed the highest %RSA among the studied treatments. In conclusion, the selected treatments can be carefully used to retain the maximum amount of the bioactive compounds.

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