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Effect of Microwave-Based Dry Blanching on Drying of Potato Slices: A Comparative Study

Megaswana Guruprasad, Jeevitha Gada Chengaiyan, Faraz Ahmad, Shafiul Haque, Esra Çapanoğlu, Deependra Rajoriya

2024ACS Omega13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Microwave (MW)-based dry blanching can inactivate oxidative enzymes like peroxidase (POD) and polyphenol oxidase (PPO) rapidly and retain a higher amount of water-soluble nutrients, like ascorbic acid. This study compared the MW-based dry blanching of potato slices of various thicknesses (5, 8, and 10 mm) with conventional methods (water and steam blanching). The time required for water and steam blanching was longer than that required for MW blanching. Potato slices of 10 mm thickness required a longer blanching duration compared with slices of a lesser thickness (5 and 8 mm). The MW-blanched samples (77.37-83.5%) retained a higher content of ascorbic acid, followed by steam-blanched (69.15-74.92%) and water-blanched (67.18-71.54%) samples. The Page, modified Page, Midilli-Kucuk, and Hii, Law, and Cloke models predicted the thin layer drying of potato slices (5 mm thickness) better with a higher coefficient of determination values (0.9607-0.9976) compared to Fick's and Exponential models (0.8942-0.9444).

Topics & Concepts

BlanchingPolyphenol oxidaseAscorbic acidChemistryFood scienceMoisturePeroxidasePoint of deliveryWater contentHorticultureBiochemistryEnzymeGeotechnical engineeringEngineeringBiologyOrganic chemistryFood Drying and ModelingMicrobial Inactivation MethodsPostharvest Quality and Shelf Life Management
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