Influence of drying methods on retention of carotenoids and their antioxidant activity in marigold flowers
Downloads
Published
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5958/0974-0112.2020.00103.6Keywords:
Tagetes sp., vacuum drying methods, HPLC, lutein, antioxidant.Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2020 Indian Journal of Horticulture

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Abstract
The present investigation was carried out to find the effect of drying methods on retention of carotenoids and their antioxidant activity in marigold flowers. The data revealed that vacuum drying method had retained highest total carotenoids (2765.76 mg/100g) and lutein (295.15μg/g) in dried petals of cv. Pusa Narangi Gainda (PNG), whereas sun drying exhibited lowest total carotenoids (79.92 mg/100g) and lutein (8.87μg/g) in dried petals of cv. Pusa Basanti Gainda (PBG). Highest β-carotene (16.45 μg/g) was retained in petals dried by vacuum drying method in cv. Pusa Arpita. Vacuum drying method also had retained highest total phenolic content (93.00 mg GAE/g) and total flavonoid content (47.74 mg RE/g) in dried petals of cv. PBG. Vacuum drying method had retained highest antioxidant activity in terms of FRAP values (838.83 μmol FeSO4/g DW) in dried petals of cv. PNG and DPPH values (76.63 %) in dried petals of cv. Pusa Arpita, whereas sun drying resulted in lowest antioxidant activity (388.55 μmol FeSO4/g DW and 53.41%) in dried petals of cv. PBG.
How to Cite
Downloads