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Application of Tamarind Waste Extracts to Improve the Antioxidant Properties of Tamarind Nectars.

Danilo Santos SouzaJane Delane Reis Pimentel SouzaJanclei Pereira CoutinhoTayse Ferreira Ferreira da SilveiraCristiano Augusto BallusJosé Teixeira FilhoHelena Maria Andre BoliniHelena Teixeira Godoy
Published in: Plant foods for human nutrition (Dordrecht, Netherlands) (2020)
Tamarind fruits are consumed worldwide and their seeds have an underexploited potential. We assessed the effect of the addition of a freeze-dried aqueous of extract tamarind seed (FAE) at three concentration levels (0.3, 1.15 and 2%) on the antioxidant capacity (DPPH, ABTS, FRAP and ORAC) and concentrations of total phenolic compounds in tamarind pulp. Conditions used to prepare the aqueous extracts were established using multivariate optimization. Moreover, nectars prepared from pulps combined with FAE were subjected to sensory tests. Tamarind fruits from three geographic regions in Brazil (Minas Gerais, São Paulo and Bahia) that were harvested in 2013 and 2014 were used in the study. Generally, the freeze-dried aqueous extracts increased the concentrations of antioxidants in the pulp. The results revealed a positive correlation between the FAE concentration in the pulp and the antioxidant capacity of all samples, particularly samples from Bahia and Minas Gerais, which presented an increase of up to 1,942% in the ABTS method when 2% FAE was incorporated into the pulp, from approximately 40.1 to 209.1 mMTrolox/gdw and 13.4 to 143.4 mMTrolox/gdw, respectively. Sensory tests indicated the satisfactory acceptance and non-distinction between nectar samples to which FAE was or was not added when the FAE concentration was less than 2.3gFAE/L, regardless of the geographic origin of the samples.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • oxidative stress
  • heavy metals
  • anti inflammatory
  • municipal solid waste