Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity

Abstract The industrial by-product of blueberry juice, a source of fibre with antioxidant capacity was used to develop cookies. Once dried and ground the blueberries by-product, its composition and functional properties were analyzed and used to develop fibre enriched cookies. A central composite de...

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Main Authors: Camila TAGLIANI, Claudia PEREZ, Ana CURUTCHET, Patricia ARCIA, Sonia COZZANO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Ciência e Tecnologia de Alimentos
Series:Food Science and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0101-20612019005011101&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-00a2ae53a1fb4a96b992758b4c5da5802020-11-25T00:45:02ZengSociedade Brasileira de Ciência e Tecnologia de AlimentosFood Science and Technology1678-457X010.1590/fst.00318S0101-20612019005011101Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacityCamila TAGLIANIClaudia PEREZAna CURUTCHETPatricia ARCIASonia COZZANOAbstract The industrial by-product of blueberry juice, a source of fibre with antioxidant capacity was used to develop cookies. Once dried and ground the blueberries by-product, its composition and functional properties were analyzed and used to develop fibre enriched cookies. A central composite design was used to optimize the cookie formulation maximizing antioxidant and total polyphenol content varying fibre content (3-9 g/100 g), baking temperature (160-180 °C) and dough thickness (0.5-1.0 cm). Antioxidant capacity and total polyphenol content showed both a similar behaviour, increasing when fibre content increases. The increasing of dough thickness and baking temperature decreases the antioxidant capacity and total polyphenol content. Cookie with 9% fibre, 180 °C baking temperature and 0.50 cm dough thickness and cookie with 9% of fibre, 170°C baking temperature and 0.75 cm dough thickness showed maximum antioxidant capacity and polyphenol content with no significant differences between them; both cookies can be labelled using a fibre claim.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0101-20612019005011101&lng=en&tlng=enantioxidant fibreindustry wasteblueberry pomaceresponse surface methodologyfunctional food
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Camila TAGLIANI
Claudia PEREZ
Ana CURUTCHET
Patricia ARCIA
Sonia COZZANO
spellingShingle Camila TAGLIANI
Claudia PEREZ
Ana CURUTCHET
Patricia ARCIA
Sonia COZZANO
Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
Food Science and Technology
antioxidant fibre
industry waste
blueberry pomace
response surface methodology
functional food
author_facet Camila TAGLIANI
Claudia PEREZ
Ana CURUTCHET
Patricia ARCIA
Sonia COZZANO
author_sort Camila TAGLIANI
title Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
title_short Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
title_full Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
title_fullStr Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
title_full_unstemmed Blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
title_sort blueberry pomace, valorization of an industry by-product source of fibre with antioxidant capacity
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Ciência e Tecnologia de Alimentos
series Food Science and Technology
issn 1678-457X
description Abstract The industrial by-product of blueberry juice, a source of fibre with antioxidant capacity was used to develop cookies. Once dried and ground the blueberries by-product, its composition and functional properties were analyzed and used to develop fibre enriched cookies. A central composite design was used to optimize the cookie formulation maximizing antioxidant and total polyphenol content varying fibre content (3-9 g/100 g), baking temperature (160-180 °C) and dough thickness (0.5-1.0 cm). Antioxidant capacity and total polyphenol content showed both a similar behaviour, increasing when fibre content increases. The increasing of dough thickness and baking temperature decreases the antioxidant capacity and total polyphenol content. Cookie with 9% fibre, 180 °C baking temperature and 0.50 cm dough thickness and cookie with 9% of fibre, 170°C baking temperature and 0.75 cm dough thickness showed maximum antioxidant capacity and polyphenol content with no significant differences between them; both cookies can be labelled using a fibre claim.
topic antioxidant fibre
industry waste
blueberry pomace
response surface methodology
functional food
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0101-20612019005011101&lng=en&tlng=en
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