Summary: Tomato peels were firstly dried by different methods (hot air, freeze-drying, and fluidized bed drying) to evaluate the recovery of lycopene, β-carotene and DPPH radical scavenging activity. Comparison of the results showed that hot air drying at 50 °C was a suitable method and alternative to freeze-drying to preserve carotenoids compounds and antioxidant activity in tomato peels. Then, ethanol/ethyl acetate (1:1) extracts from tomato peel, previously dried at 50 °C by hot air, were submitted to heat (100 °C) and light treatment (1000 lumen) to evaluate their stability as natural food dyes. Heating of the extracts caused a progressive reduction of total carotenoids, up to about 30% after 250 min of treatment, whereas the colour at the end of heat treatment showed small changes, with an overall colour difference ({increment}E) equal to 7. Fluorescent lighting treatment showed an almost total degradation of carotenoids in the extracts after 48 h combined with a fading colour.

Tomato peel drying and carotenoids stability of the extracts / Albanese, D.; Adiletta, G.; D'Acunto, M.; Cinquanta, L.; Di Matteo, M.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0950-5423. - 49:11(2014), pp. 2458-2463. [10.1111/ijfs.12602]

Tomato peel drying and carotenoids stability of the extracts

Adiletta G.;
2014

Abstract

Summary: Tomato peels were firstly dried by different methods (hot air, freeze-drying, and fluidized bed drying) to evaluate the recovery of lycopene, β-carotene and DPPH radical scavenging activity. Comparison of the results showed that hot air drying at 50 °C was a suitable method and alternative to freeze-drying to preserve carotenoids compounds and antioxidant activity in tomato peels. Then, ethanol/ethyl acetate (1:1) extracts from tomato peel, previously dried at 50 °C by hot air, were submitted to heat (100 °C) and light treatment (1000 lumen) to evaluate their stability as natural food dyes. Heating of the extracts caused a progressive reduction of total carotenoids, up to about 30% after 250 min of treatment, whereas the colour at the end of heat treatment showed small changes, with an overall colour difference ({increment}E) equal to 7. Fluorescent lighting treatment showed an almost total degradation of carotenoids in the extracts after 48 h combined with a fading colour.
2014
Carotenoids; Drying; Food dye; Lycopene; Tomato peels; β-carotene
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Tomato peel drying and carotenoids stability of the extracts / Albanese, D.; Adiletta, G.; D'Acunto, M.; Cinquanta, L.; Di Matteo, M.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0950-5423. - 49:11(2014), pp. 2458-2463. [10.1111/ijfs.12602]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1695405
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