| نویسندگان | Mahdi Hedayatizadeh,Hossein Chaji,Parvin Sharayei,Yeganeh Sabeghi,Danial Gandomzadeh |
| نشریه | Journal of Food Processing and Preservation |
| شماره صفحات | 1-11 |
| شماره سریال | 2024 |
| شماره مجلد | 7987269 |
| ضریب تاثیر (IF) | 0.791 |
| نوع مقاله | Full Paper |
| تاریخ انتشار | 2024 |
| رتبه نشریه | ISI |
| نوع نشریه | چاپی |
| کشور محل چاپ | ایران |
| نمایه نشریه | JCR،Scopus |
چکیده مقاله
Red pepper is a valuable ingredient known for its abundance of vitamins and antioxidants. But, it usually needs to be dried for
longer preservation. Hence, this research is aimed at examining the drying kinetics and quality attributes of dried red peppers
utilizing various solar drying methods, in comparison with traditional open sun drying (OSD) and industrial laboratory thin
layer dryers (LTLD). Analysis parameters employed include determining moisture content, measuring color properties,
evaluating antioxidant capacity, analyzing capsaicinoid content, and assessing microbial presence. The drying process took
place in a sunny environment with fluctuations in temperature and relative humidity as evidence of the dynamic conditions
experienced within the solar dryers. It was observed that the logarithmic model was the most accurate in predicting moisture
ratio over time, estimating a drying time of 25 hours to achieve 10% moisture content. The result demonstrated that direct
solar dryers (DSD), indirect solar dryers (ISD), and mix mode solar dryers (MMSD) methods showed moderate changes in
color parameters, with average ΔL ∗, Δa ∗, and Δb ∗ values of -5.08, -23.71, and -13.62, respectively. The average overall color
difference (ΔE) for these methods was 27.96. In addition, after comparing it to the LTLD method, which showed the highest
content of phenolic compounds at 47.89%, MMSD displayed a slightly lower content of 44.71%. Similarly, MMSD exhibited
higher levels of DPPH radical scavenging activity and ferric reducing power, measuring at 44.22% and 1163.75 μmol Fe2+/L,
respectively. The capsaicin content remained relatively consistent across all drying methods, with MMSD, DSD, and LTLD
demonstrating similar levels of approximately 31 mg/g. Although MMSD had slightly higher mold and yeast counts compared
to LTLD, ISD, and DSD, it remained lower than OSD (less than 0.56 logcfu/g
10 ). Furthermore, MMSD showed a lower total
microbial count in comparison to other drying methods. These findings suggest that MMSD shows promise as a drying
technique for preserving the phenolic compounds and antioxidant activity of the dried product.
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