Comparative evaluation on drying of pomegranate arils for production of anardana

Published

2023-05-24

Keywords:

Punica granatum L., Antioxidants, Solar drying, Furfural
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Authors

  • Chetna Sharma Department of Food Science and Technology, Dr Yashwant Singh Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Nauni, Solan, HP 173230, India.
  • N. S. Thakur Department of Food Science and Technology, Dr Yashwant Singh Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Nauni, Solan, HP 173230, India.
  • Abhimanyu Thakur Department of Food Science and Technology, Dr Yashwant Singh Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Nauni, Solan, HP 173230, India.
  • Hamid Food Technology and Nutrition, School of Agriculture, Lovely Professional University, Phagwara-144411, Punjab, India.
  • Kanchan Bhatt Department of Food Science and Technology, Dr Yashwant Singh Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Nauni, Solan, HP 173230, India

Abstract

Wild pomegranate is an important wild fruit of the Punicaceae family, which has great economic importance. Pretreated arils (steam blanched for 30 sec followed by sulphuring @ 0.3% for 60 min) were dried by different intermittent drying modes to minimize energy utilization and maximize quality retention of dried arils at a lower cost. Various drying modes used were mechanical cabinet drying (60±2°C), sun drying (18-31° C), solar tunnel (21-39°C) drying, a combination of solar tunnel + mechanical cabinet drier, a combination of open sun + solar tunnel drier and combination of open sun+ solar tunnel + mechanical cabinet drier. The quality of dried arils (anardana) obtained was compared based on various physical, chemical and sensory characteristics besides energy utilization in each method with economic analysis. Arils dried in mechanical cabinet drier possessed highest values of desirable physico-chemical characteristics viz., colour, TSS (45.20° B), titratable acidity (11.40 %), ascorbic acid (11.70 mg/100g), total sugars (25.45 %), anthocyanins (33.76 mg/100g), phenols (126.05 mg/100g), crude fibers (35.91 %), oil (8.89 %) and antioxidant activity (65.22 %). It took a minimum time (26 h) to dry a given tray load, had minimum non-enzymatic browning (0.06 OD), furfural (11.89 ppb) and hydroxy methyl furfural (0.90 ppm), besides highest energy consumption for drying. Mechanical cabinet-dried arils were rated best among all drying modes based on the highest sensory scores. However, the quality of solar-dried anardana was at par with the mechanically dried anardana with a low cost of production (Rs 251 per kg as against Rs 326 per kg).

How to Cite

Chetna Sharma, N. S. Thakur, Abhimanyu Thakur, Hamid, & Kanchan Bhatt. (2023). Comparative evaluation on drying of pomegranate arils for production of anardana. Indian Journal of Horticulture, 79(1), 116–123. Retrieved from https://journal.iahs.org.in/index.php/ijh/article/view/765

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