Combined oven/freeze drying as a cost and energy-efficient drying method for preserving quality attributes and volatile compounds of carrot slices

Date published

2025-01-09

Free to read from

2025-01-17

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers

Department

Course name

Type

Article

ISSN

2813-3595

Format

Citation

Mina ZP, Kaseke T, Fadiji T, et al., (2025) Combined oven/freeze drying as a cost and energy-efficient drying method for preserving quality attributes and volatile compounds of carrot slices. Frontiers in Horticulture, Volume 3, January 2025, Article number 1447957

Abstract

Introduction

An effective and efficient drying method for preserving fresh carrots is essential in food processing. Combined drying represents a novel approach that addresses the shortcomings of conventional methods by balancing energy consumption, cost, and product quality.

Methods

This study evaluated the impact of combining oven drying (OD) with freeze-drying (FD) on drying behavior, energy requirements, costs, enzyme activity, and the physicochemical and sensory properties of dried carrots. Drying conditions included 36 hours of FD, OD, and combinations of OD and FD at 1 h of OD + 21 h of FD (OD1-FD21), 2 h of OD + 18 h of FD (OD2-FD18), 3 h of OD + 15 h of FD (OD3-FD15), and 9 h of OD.

Results and discussion

Compared to FD alone, the OD-FD combination reduced drying time by 39–50% and decreased energy consumption and costs by 40–56%. FD and OD-FD reduced polyphenol oxidase activity by 71–85% and peroxidase activity by 29–52% compared to OD alone. FD carrot slices retained significantly higher levels of β-carotene (11.67–25.96 mg/100 g DM), lycopene (9.91–21.85 mg/100 g DM), total phenolic content (7.12–10.24 mg GAE/100 g DM), and DPPH radical scavenging activity (16.44–19.38 mM AAE/100 g DM) than OD and OD-FD slices. OD-FD slices exhibited the highest levels of volatile compounds, including aldehydes, terpenes, esters, alcohols, ketones, and acids, indicating superior flavor preservation.

Conclusion

The OD2-FD18 combination emerged as the optimal method, significantly reducing energy consumption and costs while maintaining better β-carotene, total phenolic content, DPPH radical scavenging activity, and volatile compound profiles. This study highlights the potential of combined drying methods to enhance drying efficiency and product quality.

Description

This article is part of the Research Topic: Sustainable Approaches to Food Loss and Waste Reduction in Smallholder Horticulture: from Proof of Concept to Scale

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

4004 Chemical Engineering, 30 Agricultural, Veterinary and Food Sciences, 40 Engineering, 3006 Food Sciences, bioactive compounds, energy consumption, carrot slices, freeze-drying, oven drying, quality attributes

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Funder/s

This work is based on the research supported wholly/in part by the National Research Foundation of South Africa (Grant Number: SPAR231013155231), the Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (GDARD) and the University Research Committee at the University of Johannesburg

Relationships

Relationships

Resources