Accelerated ageing of cocoa mucilage wine through hydrodynamic cavitation
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Date
2025-05-22
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Department of Processing and Food Engineering, Kelappaji College of Agricultural Engineering and Food Technology,
Abstract
Affordable source of vital vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. Among them, Moringa
oleifera Lam., often called the "miracle tree," stands out for its exceptional nutritional
and medicinal properties. Its leaves are rich in bioactive compounds with antioxidant,
anti-inflammatory, and antimicrobial benefits, contributing to improved nutrition and
addressing malnutrition, especially in rural households. However, the high moisture
content of fresh Moringa leaves makes them highly perishable, necessitating effective
post-harvest management to extend their shelf life. Proper dehydration techniques not
only reduce spoilage but also help retain their nutritional value, ensuring year-round
availability. Converting Moringa leaves into powder enhances their stability and
facilitates their incorporation into value-added products. Additionally, suitable
packaging and storage conditions play a crucial role in preserving quality and
minimizing post-harvest losses. Despite its significance, research on optimizing postharvest
handling of Moringa leaves remains limited in Kerala. Hence with this
background the present study entitled “Standardisation of dehydration, storage and
packaging of drumstick (Moringa oleifera Lam.) leaves” was undertaken to
standardize pretreatment methods, dehydration techniques, and suitable packaging
materials and storage conditions to enhance the shelf life and preserve the nutritional
integrity of Moringa oleifera Lam. leaves.
The study was structured into three experiments. The first experiment was to
standardise the pretreatments of Moringa leaves. Fresh Moringa leaves were
collected, destalked, washed, and subjected to four treatments: control (no blanching),
hot water blanching (80°C for 1 min), steam blanching (1 min in a steam cooker), and
microwave blanching (800 W for 30 s). Blanched leaves were rapidly cooled, shadedried,
powdered, and analysed for physical and biochemical properties including
recovery percentage, moisture content, crude fibre, crude fat, total protein, total ash,
total carbohydrate, ascorbic acid, total chlorophyll content, total carotenoids and total
phenols.
The results revealed that blanching treatments significantly influenced the
physical and biochemical parameters of Moringa leaves. Microwave blanching (T4)
emerged as the most effective pre-treatment, yielding the highest recovery percentage
(22.81%), lowest moisture content (8.48%), and maximum retention of crude fibre
(13.50%), total carbohydrates (42.00%) and carotenoids (114.48 mg/100g). Steam
blanching (T3) and hot water blanching (T2) also showed significant improvements in
nutrient retention compared to the control (T1). The control treatment exhibited the
lowest recovery (17.94%) and highest moisture content (11.64%), highlighting the
importance of blanching in reducing moisture and enhancing nutrient concentration.
Microwave blanching also retained higher levels of total ash (12.38%), total protein
(24.23%), ascorbic acid (115.61mg/100g), and total chlorophyll (299.80%) and crude
fat (7.53%), making it the best pre-treatment method.
Moringa leaves blanched by microwave blanching were subjected to different
dehydration methods, including shade drying (23–31°C), cabinet drying (50±5°C),
microwave oven drying (60°C), and vacuum drying (35±5°C). After drying, the
leaves were powdered and analysed for physical (recovery percentage), biochemical
(moisture content, crude fibre, crude fat, total protein, total ash, total carbohydrate,
ascorbic acid, total chlorophyll content, total carotenoids and total phenols.), mineral
(Fe, Ca and K), and antioxidant properties.
The results demonstrated that dehydration methods significantly influenced
the physical, biochemical, mineral, and antioxidant properties of Moringa oleifera
leaves. Vacuum drying (T4) resulted in the highest recovery percentage (28.23%),
total carbohydrate (48.00%), total protein (26.28%), total ash (22.42%), ascorbic acid
(139.02 mg/100 g), and total phenols (160.91 mg GAE/100 g), while also exhibiting
the highest antioxidant activity (IC₅₀: 3.82 mg/ml). Microwave drying (T3) recorded
the highest total carotenoid content (119.43 mg/100 g) and retained notable amounts
of crude fat (7.42%) and iron (13.34 mg/100 g). Cabinet drying (T2) yielded the
highest crude fibre (9.70%) but the lowest crude fat (5.77%) and protein content
(23.33%). Shade drying (T1) retained the highest total chlorophyll (324.41 mg/100 g)
and crude fat (8.69%) but had the lowest recovery (24.28%) and total carbohydrate
content (42.33%). Vacuum drying emerged as the most effective dehydration method,
followed by microwave drying, due to their superior retention of key nutrients and
antioxidant properties.
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Keywords
Processing and Food Engineering, Agricultural Engineering and Food Technology, Cocoa mucilage wine, Hydrodynamic cavitation
Citation
176589