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Color and Stability of Anthocyanins of Chagalapoli ( Ardisia compressa K.) Fruit Added to an Isotonic Beverage as Microcapsules and as Free Extract.

María Vianey Antonio-GómezYolanda Salinas-MorenoFrancisco Hernández-RosasJosé Andrés Herrera-CorredorAdriana Contreras-Oliva
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The demand for natural pigments in the food industry is increasing. Color and stability of anthocyanins of chagalapoli ( Ardisia compressa K.) fruit added to an isotonic beverage as microcapsules and free extract were evaluated at two temperatures (4 and 25 °C) in the absence of light. Anthocyanins degradation followed first-order kinetics in the evaluated conditions. The stability of anthocyanins, measured by the variables reaction rate (K), half-life time (t 1/2 ), and anthocyanin retention (AR), was affected significantly ( p < 0.01) by temperature. At the end of storage at 4 °C, AR was 91.2 ± 0.28% and 89.63 ± 0.22% in the beverages with microcapsules (BM) and with anthocyanins from extract (BE), respectively, without a significant difference ( p ≥ 0.05) between them. However, at 25 °C, AR in the BM was 53.72 ± 0.27%, a significantly lower value ( p ≤ 0.05) than that in BE (58.83 ± 1.37%). The color difference values (ΔE) in beverages stored at 4 °C were 3.81 and 2.17 for BM and BE, respectively, while at 25 °C, it was 8.57 and 8.21, respectively. The most stable anthocyanin was cyanidin 3-galactoside. Chagalapoli anthocyanins, both as microcapsules or as an extract, are adequate for adding natural color to isotonic beverages.
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