CIDCA   05380
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION Y DESARROLLO EN CRIOTECNOLOGIA DE ALIMENTOS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Chlorogenic acid retention in white and purple eggplant after
Autor/es:
MARÍA J. ZARO, LEIDY C. ORTIZ, SONIA KEUNCHKARIAN, ALICIA R. CHAVES,
Revista:
LEBENSMITTEL-WISSENSCHAFT UND-TECHNOLOGIE-FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2015 vol. 64 p. 802 - 808
ISSN:
0023-6438
Resumen:
The stability of vegetable antioxidants in response to processing and cooking treatments may be affectedby the variety. However, the information available in the literature is very limited. In this work wedetermined the influence of the eggplant variety (white e cv Cloud Nine and purple e cv Lucia) onpulp chlorogenic acid content (5-O-caffeoyl-quinic acid; CQA) and antioxidant capacity (AC) in responseto common pre-processing (cutting, salting or blanching), processing (air-vacuum- solar- and freezedrying,slow- and fast-freezing) and cooking methods (microwaving, baking, grilling, steaming, boilingor pressure cooking). Fresh purple Lucia eggplants showed higher AC and CQA content (16%) than whiteCloud Nine fruit. Fruit pre-processing caused significant losses of AC, with the effect being higher in thepurple cultivar. Hot air- and sun-drying almost depleted CQA in both cultivars. In contrast, white eggplantsretained higher AC upon freezing and microwaving. Wet cooking methods (boiling and pressurecooking) markedly increased fruit AC indicating that these preparation procedures improved antioxidantextractability. The eggplant cultivar has a major influence in antioxidant retention during processing andcooking; the white variety Cloud Nine proved in general, more suitable for processing in terms ofantioxidant retention than the purple Lucia genotype.