| Literature DB >> 29884378 |
Elenilson G Alves Filho1, Lorena Mara A Silva2, Edy S de Brito3, Nedio Jair Wurlitzer2, Fabiano A N Fernandes4, Maria Cristiane Rabelo5, Thatyane V Fonteles5, Sueli Rodrigues5.
Abstract
The effects of thermal (pasteurization and sterilization) and non-thermal (ultrasound and plasma) processing on the composition of prebiotic and non-prebiotic acerola juices were evaluated using NMR and GC-MS coupled to chemometrics. The increase in the amount of Vitamin C was the main feature observed after thermal processing, followed by malic acid, choline, trigonelline, and acetaldehyde. On the other hand, thermal processing increased the amount of 2-furoic acid, a degradation product from ascorbic acid, as well as influenced the decrease in the amount of esters and alcohols. In general, the non-thermal processing did not present relevant effect on juices composition. The addition of prebiotics (inulin and gluco-oligosaccharides) decreased the effect of processing on juices composition, which suggested a protective effect by microencapsulation. Therefore, chemometric evaluation of the 1H qNMR and GC-MS dataset was suitable to follow changes in acerola juice under different processing.Entities:
Keywords: Acerola juice; HTST; Plasma; UHT; Ultrasound
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29884378 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2018.05.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514