Effect of different pre-treatment on acrylamide content, nutrition value, starch digestibility and anthocyanin bioaccessibility of purple sweet potato (Ipomoea batata) deep-fried chips.
Food Chem
; 460(Pt 2): 140535, 2024 Jul 20.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39068802
ABSTRACT
Veggie chips have gained popularity in the European market. These are considered healthier than potato chips by consumers. However, few works evaluate their nutritional and digestibility. The current work aimed to evaluate the effect of four pre-frying treatments (soaking, blanching, pulsed electric field (PEF) and PEF + blanching combination (PEFB)) on the chemical composition, anthocyanins, acrylamide, and digestive behavior (starch hydrolysis and anthocyanins bioaccessibility) of purple sweet potato deep-fried chips. In total 15 independent batches were made, three for each studied treatment (also a control without pretreatment was developed). The studied pretreatments impacted on fat and starch content, especially blanching and PEFB, which caused an increase in fat absorption and break starch, generating maltodextrins. Nineteen anthocyanins were detected, mainly cyanidin and peonidin derivatives, but a drastic loss was observed in blanched, PEF-treated and PEF-B-Treated chips. Acrylamide values ranged from 504.11 to 6350.0- µg/kg, with the highest values reported by untreated chips and the lowest by PEF-B-treated chips (p < 0.05). The anthocyanin's bioaccessibility ranged between 66.57 and 92.88%, with soaked chips that showed the highest values.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Language:
En
Journal:
Food Chem
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
España