Incorporation of spray-dried encapsulated bioactive peptides from coconut ( Cocos nucifera L.) meal by-product in bread formulation.
Khashayar SarabandiAlireaza DashipourZahra AkbarbagluSeyed Hadi PeighambardoustAli AyasehHossein Samadi KafilSeid Mahdi JafariAmin Mousavi KhaneghahPublished in: Food science & nutrition (2024)
This study aimed to stabilize and mask the bitterness of peptides obtained from the enzymatic hydrolysis of coconut-meal protein with maltodextrin (MD) and maltodextrin-pectin (MD-P) as carriers via spray-drying. Essential (~35%), hydrophobic (~32%), antioxidant (~15%), and bitter (~45%) amino acids comprised a significant fraction of the peptide composition (with a degree of hydrolysis of 33%). The results indicated that the peptide's production efficiency, physical and functional properties, and hygroscopicity improved after spray-drying. Morphological features of free peptides (fragile and porous structures), spray-dried with MD (wrinkled with indented structures), and MD-P combination (relatively spherical particles with smooth surfaces) were influenced by the process type and feed composition. Adding free and microencapsulated peptides to the bread formula (2% W/W) caused changes in moisture content (35%-43%), water activity (0.89-0.94), textural properties (1-1.6 N), specific volume (5.5-6 cm 3 /g), porosity (18%-27%), and color indices of the fortified product. MD-P encapsulated peptides in bread fortification resulted in thermal stability and increased antioxidant activity (DPPH and ABTS + radical scavenging: 4.5%-39.4% and 31.6%-46.8%, respectively). MD-P (as a carrier) could maintain sensory characteristics and mask the bitterness of peptides in the fortified bread. The results of this research can be used to produce functional food and diet formulations.