Literature DB >> 33601282

Vitamin C, protein, and dietary fibre contents as affected by genotype, agro-climatic conditions, and cooking method on tubers of Solanum tuberosum Group Phureja.

Séverine Thomas1, Juan-David Vásquez-Benítez2, Fabio-Alexander Cuéllar-Cepeda2, Teresa Mosquera-Vásquez3, Carlos-Eduardo Narváez-Cuenca4.   

Abstract

The simultaneous effect of genotype, agro-climatic conditions, and cooking method was evaluated towards the contents of vitamin C, protein, and soluble, insoluble, and total dietary fibre in potato tubers from the Group Phureja. Within the tested treatments, vitamin C was affected the most (9.4-85.1 mg/100 g DW), followed by insoluble dietary fibre (3.9-16.6 g/100 DW), soluble dietary fibre (1.0-3.9 g/100 g DW), total dietary fibre (3.6-fold change), and protein (1.7-4.3 g/100 g DW). The cooking method had a high effect on the variability of the contents of vitamin C, protein, insoluble dietary fibre, and total dietary fibre (74.2-92.8% of the total variance). In contrast, not only the cooking method, but also the agro-climatic conditions had a high effect on the content of soluble dietary fibre (32.6 and 34.8% of the total variance, respectively). Total dietary fibre had a protective effect on vitamin C upon cooking.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Boiling; Dietary fibre; Frying; Location; Potato tubers; Protein; Vitamin C

Year:  2021        PMID: 33601282     DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129207

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Chem        ISSN: 0308-8146            Impact factor:   7.514


  1 in total

1.  Cooking methods affected the phytochemicals and antioxidant activities of potato from different varieties.

Authors:  Haitian Fang; Xiuxiu Yin; Jiequn He; Shihua Xin; Huiling Zhang; Xingqian Ye; Yunyun Yang; Jinhu Tian
Journal:  Food Chem X       Date:  2022-05-21
  1 in total

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