Shivani
Motegaonkar
a,
Amar
Shankar
a,
Humeera
Tazeen
ac,
Mahendra
Gunjal
*ab and
Sachin
Payyanad
d
aDepartment of Food Technology, Faculty of Engineering and Technology, JAIN (Deemed to-be University), Bangalore, Karnataka, India. E-mail: mahendragunjal74@gmail.com; Tel: +91-9657259325
bDepartment of Food Technology and Nutrition, School of Agriculture, Lovely Professional University, Phagwara, Punjab, India
cDepartment of Agriculture and Biosystems Engineering, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND-58102, USA
dFire and Combustion Research Centre (FCRC), JAIN (Deemed-to-be University), Bangalore, Karnataka, India
First published on 28th March 2024
Carrot (Daucus carota L.) is one of the major root crops, abundantly grown throughout the world. Carrots are perishable and difficult to preserve in fresh form. They are widely utilized due to rich bioactive compounds and nutrients, including carotenoids, anthocyanins, dietary fiber, and vitamins. The adoption of processing techniques becomes imperative with conventional and modern dehydration or drying methods as pivotal technologies for extending the shelf life of products. This review systematically explores the effect of diverse drying processing technologies on carrots, encompassing both conventional and modern processing methods, including solar drying, tray drying, freeze drying, microwave drying, spray drying, hot air oven drying, infrared drying, and conductive hydro drying. Through an in-depth study, the effect of these technologies on the physical characteristics and biochemical parameters (ascorbic acid, carotenoids, flavonoids, phenolic acids, total phenolics, and antioxidant activity) of carrots is elucidated. The significance of dried and fresh carrots is their use as an ingredient in various food products, such as beverages, soups, sauces, ready meals, and healthy snacks. Apart from providing an overview of current research, this review suggests possible directions for further studies on carrots. This review contributes to the holistic understanding of sustainable approaches to carrot processing and sets the stage for future developments in this area.
Shivani Motegaonkar | Shivani Datta Motegaonkar has completed an M.Tech. in Food Technology from the Department of Food Technology, School of Engineering and Technology, Jain (Deemed-to-be University), Bangalore, Karnataka. Her topics of interest include fruit, vegetables, food engineering, functional foods, and nutraceuticals. She has published 2 articles. She is a member of the Association of Food Scientists and Technologists (ASFTI), Mysuru, Karnataka. Readers may contact her at Email ID: E-mail: mshivad03@gmail.com. |
Amar Shankar | Amar Shankar received his Doctorate in Philosophy from VTU Belagavi in Biotechnology (2019). He is currently working at the Department of Food Technology, JAIN (Deemed to be University) as Assistant Professor and Head for the last eight years. His areas of interest include food processing technology, biotechnology, and solid waste management. He has published over 25 research papers in peer-reviewed international journals and conferences. Amar Shankar has published 4 book chapters with reputed international publishers. Readers may contact him at Email ID: E-mail: nathshankar.2007@gmail.com. |
Humeera Tazeen | Humeera Tazeen is currently Graduate Research Assistant at the Department of Agricultural Engineering at North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota, USA, pursuing her 2nd PhD. She holds a graduate degree (2009) in Agricultural Engineering from the University of Agricultural Sciences, GKVK, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India; Masters (2011) in Food and Agricultural Process Engineering; and 1st PhD (Agricultural Process Engineering, 2017) from Tamil Nadu Agricultural University, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India. She is the recipient of UGC-MANF fellowship (2013–2017). She also worked in the area of non-thermal food preservation and development of novel food packaging. She has served at Jain University, Bangalore, and Sri Shakthi Institute of Engineering and Technology as an assistant Professor. She has also worked as an R&D Executive in ABT Foods-Dairy Division, Coimbatore. She has participated in several national and international conferences and seminars. Apart from these, she serves as a reviewer in the Journal of Food Engineering. For her contribution in the field of Agricultural Process Engineering, she received the Women Scientist Award from Society for Scientific Development in Agriculture and Technology. Readers may contact her at Email ID: E-mail: humtaz@gmail.com. |
Mahendra Gunjal | Mahendra Gunjal is a PhD Research scholar in the Department of Food Technology and Nutrition, School of Agriculture, Lovely Professional University, Phagwara, Punjab, India. He has received a PhD fellowship (JRF/SRF) from Chhatrapati Shahu Maharaj Research, Training and Human Development Institute (SARTHI), Pune, under Chhatrapati Shahu Maharaj National Research Fellowship Program (CSMNRF-2021). His topics of interest include functional foods, nutraceuticals, fruit and vegetable technology, dairy technology, and bakery and confectionary technology. He has published more than 15 research and review papers in refereed and peer-reviewed journals of national and international repute and has filed 25 patent ideas in the field of food science and technology. Mahendra Gunjal has published 7 book chapters with reputed international publishers such as Elsevier, Springer, CRC Press, and Apple Academy. Readers may contact him at Email ID: E-mail: mahendragunjal74@gmail.com. |
Sachin Payyanad | Mr. Sachin Payyanad is a Research Scholar at the Fire and Combustion Research Centre, JAIN (Deemed-to-be University). He completed his B.Tech. in Mechanical Engineering from Calicut University and completed his M.Tech. in Renewable Energy Engineering and Management from TERI University, New Delhi. He worked with IIT, Delhi, and the Centre of Excellence in Systems, Energy, and Environment on various research projects during his tenure. His research areas include solid fuel combustion, biomass combustion systems, drying of horticulture products, and clean energy solutions. Readers may contact him at Email ID: E-mail: sachin.payyanad@gmail.com. |
Sustainability spotlightCarrot (Daucus carota L.) is one of the unique root vegetable crops among all vegetable families owing to the presence of different types of nutrients and bioactive compounds, which provide numerous health benefits. However, it contains high levels of moisture content and low shelf life; thus, it is necessary to develop a sustainable drying technology for carrots to enhance their storage shelf life and achieve maximum retention of bioactive compounds present in them. In recent years, convectional and modern processing methods have gained popularity because of their numerous benefits, such as simple unit operation and low energy consumption. Therefore, the selection between modern and conventional drying technologies for carrots should be made with the careful consideration of sustainability goals. In this review article, all the recent scientific findings address the above-mentioned problems for promoting sustainable carrot drying practices. |
Carrot is a good source of various bioactive compounds, viz. carotenoids, flavonoids, phenolic compounds, vitamins (B1, B2, B6), and minerals, which help to provide biological and medicinal properties such as improving digestion, regulating blood circulation, and improving eye vision.8 It is a good source of higher antioxidant compounds that show anti-carcinogenic and immune enhancing properties. Also, it helps to control diabetes, cholesterol, and cardiac disease and has antihypertensive, hepatoprotective, and wound healing properties.8,9
Carrots are the most common food in the human diet and they can be eaten fresh and cooked into a variety of dishes or processed into puree, juices, or dehydrated products.10,11 However, carrots are a seasonal product and their quality can be largely degraded by the decrease of their bioactive compounds after being harvested. In addition, during their storage, moisture content, sweetness, firmness, color, and taste are also changed, sometimes forming an unpleasant smell, which affects the consumers' acceptance of the product.12 Fresh carrots can be converted into dehydrated form by drying, and the dried carrots can be commercially used as a natural ingredient for the formulation and development of functional products such as dietary supplements, nutraceuticals, and cosmetics.1
Different kinds of drying methods are used for drying carrots such as freeze drying, vacuum drying, osmotic dehydration, cabinet or tray drying, fluidized bed drying, ohmic and microwave heating, spray drying, conductive hydro drying, and supercritical drying. These methods help to improve shelf-life, product diversity, and volume reduction.13 The present review examines and compares the effect of various modern and conventional drying methods on carrots (slices, strips, cubes, puree, juice), and their structural, physico-chemical, bioactive compounds parameters, and quality parameters are discussed. Additionally, it highlights the nutrient and bioactive compounds profiles and the associated health benefits of carrots. Furthermore, it explores opportunities for utilizing carrots in the creation of different kinds of functional food products, aiming to improve the storability, production efficiency, product quality and shelf-life of carrots for sustainable practices. Thus, we conducted searches for relevant articles across various research engines such as Google Scholar, ResearchGate, ScienceDirect, and PubMed. Synonyms and alternative words were identified and used to obtain the current literature. The major search terms and keywords used were carrot, carrot bioactive compounds, nutritional value, health benefits of carrot, carrot drying, drying methods, carrot processing, and carrot products.
Carrots possess remarkable health benefits because they contain various nutrients and bioactive compounds such as carotenoids, polyphenols, and vitamins. They show good antioxidative, anticarcinogenic, mutagenetic, and immune enhancing properties.17–19 They contain antioxidants that have the ability to lower free radicals in the body, and various dietary carotenoids have been shown to have anti-cancer effects.20 Saleem et al.21 showed that carrot extracts contain bioactive compounds that exhibited inhibition against MCF-7 cells in a dose-dependent effect against microbes and breast cancer proliferation. Varshney and Mishra8 reported that carrot is a rich source of vitamin C and vitamin A, which help to keep human skin healthy and prevent wrinkles, discoloration, and uneven skin-related problems. Black carrots contain a good amount of anthocyanin, which is used for the treatment of brain cancer.22 In another study, the impact of carrot fraction consisting of pentane/diethyl ether (50:50) on the motility and invasion of cancer cells from the lung, breast, glioblastoma, and skin was studied. From this treatment, a notable reduction was observed in cell motility across all four cell lines, accompanied by a reduction in cancer cell invasion and an elevation in adhesion.23 Black carrot contains a good amount of anthocyanin compounds are more effective for reducing different types of cancer. The growth of cancer cells (HT-29 and HL-60) was 80% inhibited by lyophilized black carrot powder (20 μg mL−1) extracted from aqueous extract. The ethanol-based extract obtained from black carrot is helpful for the treatment of breast, human colon, and prostate cancers and demonstrated antioxidant and anti-proliferative activities against diverse cancer cell lines.9 Various studies showed that carrots (leaves, flowers, petals, and fruits) show good anti-microbial activity against different types of microbial species including Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Bacillus subtilis, Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella typhimurium, Streptococcus pyogenes, Haemopilus influenzae, and Campylobacter jejuni.24,25
The antifungal properties of carrot subspecies (carota, gummifer, halophilus, hispanicus, and maximus) were studied against different microbes, namely, Fulvia fulvum, Trichoderma viride, Aspergillus ochraceus, Candida albicans, Penicillium expansum, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Aspergillus flavus, which were found to show good anti-fungal activities.24–26 In a regular diet, consuming carrot-containing bioactive compounds (beta-carotene, lutein, and alpha-carotene) is associated with cardioprotective benefits. These effects encompass the activation of the lymphocyte, inhibition of cell proliferation, anti-oxidative properties, anti-inflammatory effects, reduction of body-mass index, lowered blood pressure and triglyceride, and modulation of relevant enzyme activities.8,27
Carrots show higher water activity, more susceptibility to mechanical damage, rapid microbial spoilage, lower shelf life, and environmental factors. Thus, the storage of carrot for long periods is challenging. These factors affect their quality attributes.30 One of the major components present in carrots is water, which showed an impact on their quality parameters such as taste and texture of dried food items, microbiological growth, and fat oxidation. Food material when exposed to the environment either gains or loses water to maintain an appropriate moisture content in a state of equilibrium with the relative humidity of the environment.31 One of the most popular and common methods is drying, which helps to increase food storage stability, reduce water activity, inhibit microbial growth, and reduce the physicochemical changes of food products.32 Based on the technique used to remove the water, these processes can be broadly categorized as thermal drying, osmotic drying, and mechanical dewatering.33 The effects of different drying processing methods on the physical and nutritional properties of carrot samples are presented in (Table 1 and Fig. 1).
Drying methods | Product form | Processing parameters | Physical parameters | Physico-chemical parameters | Biochemical parameters | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Solar drying | Slices | Slice dimension: thickness 1–2 mm | The overall shrinkage ratio and drying ratio of carrot slices are 11:1 and 8.8:1 | The retention of protein 97.22%, starch 91.32%, total sugar 90.04%, reducing sugar 89.34%, fat 94.56%, and energy value 92.00% | The retention of β-carotene 72.15% and ascorbic acid 58.00% | 15 |
Drying time: 15–16 h | Yield solar dried carrot was 9.09% | |||||
The sensory attributes such as flavour, texture, and taste are acceptable for upto 6 months | ||||||
Sun drying | Slices | Slice dimension: thickness 0.3, 0.5, and 1.0 cm | The thickness of carrot slices impacts the weight loss value in all samples | NA | NA | 34 |
Drying temperature: 31 °C | ||||||
Drying time: 8 days | ||||||
Indirect solar drying | Strips | Strips dimension: thickness 0.2 cm and width 2 cm | The color difference (ΔE) 14.11 ± 0.14 between the carrots in the dry and fresh conditions ratio of redness over yellowness increased from 0.75 to 0.89, the browning index decreased from 209.82 ± 0.62 to 148.38 ± 0.26 and whiteness index increased from 24.5 ± 0.11 to 31.8 ± 0.17 | NA | NA | 35 |
Solar irradiance: 7.2 kW h m2 per day | ||||||
Airflow velocity: 1 m s−1 | ||||||
Solar cabinet drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Pusa Kesar | Drying rate variation | NA | β-Carotene content 93 mg/100 g degradation | 36 |
Slice dimension: thickness 3 mm | ||||||
Blanching: 100 °C for 6 min | A lower rehydration ratio of 4.70 after 120 days 3.84 were observed | |||||
Airflow velocity: 0.0082 m s−1 | ||||||
Drying temperature: 55 °C for 16 h | ||||||
Solar drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 2 mm and length 2.5 cm | NA | Moisture content 91.42 ± 0.21 to 10.51 ± 0.31 | Iron content was from 3.91 ± 0.37 to 5.03 ± 0.22 mg/100 g increased, zinc content was from 0.41 ± 0.05 to 0.88 ± 0.05 mg/100 g increased, and β-carotene reduced from 6.72 ± 0.28 mg/100 g to 3.53 ± 0.41 mg/100 g (0.53 folds decrease) | 37 |
Blanching: 94 °C for 3 min | ||||||
Solar drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 3 mm and width 5 mm | Dehydration rates of 3.3 ± 0.30% and water activity 0.56 ± 0.011 to 0.63 ± 0.003 were observed | NA | A drying load of 715 g m−2 contained the highest β-carotene of 17.4%, vitamin A activity of 362 IU g−1 | 39 |
Drying temperature: 27 to 50 °C | ||||||
Solar drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: PC-34, Sel-21, Ambala local’ and Nantes | The 3 mm thick slices after 12 h of drying maximum total solids, dehydration ratio, and non-enzymatic browning after drying at 60 °C observed | NA | NA | 16 |
Slices dimensions: 3, 4.5, 5, 7, and 10 mm | ||||||
Blanching: hot water (95 °C), steam, and microwave blanching | ||||||
Chemical pre-treatment: ascorbic acid, brine, potassium sorbate, and potassium metabisulphite (KMS) | ||||||
Drying temperature: 50, 60, 70, 80 and 90 °C | ||||||
Cabinet hot air dryer | Slices | Slice thickness: 3 and 6 mm thickness | The temperature of 59.8 °C and the slice 3.5 mm thickness the La*b*; ΔE of 62.18 ± 5.12, 22.46 ± 1.98, 40.35 ± 6.64, 6.31 ± 4.74 and rehydration ratio of 0.48 ± 0.07 observed | NA | The highest retention of total carotenoids final product was 66.2% at 60 °C followed by 51.1% and 42.2% at 70 and 50 °C | 39 |
Airflow velocity: 0.6 m s−1 | ||||||
Drying temperature: 50, 60, and 70 °C | ||||||
Tray drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Pusa Kesar | NA | NA | Increased temperature reduction in ascorbic acid from 32.60 to 13.53 mg/100 g and β-carotene from 55.25 to 9.39 mg/100 g | 40 |
Slices dimension: thickness 3 mm thickness and diameter 3 cm | ||||||
Drying temperature: 60, 65 70, 75, and 80 °C | ||||||
Hot air drying | Cubes | Carrot varieties: Kazan, Maxima, Nandor, Nektarina, Simba, and Tito | The Kazan and Nektarina showed highest and lowest moisture diffusivity of 7.52 × 10−9 and 3.31 × 10−9 m2 s−1 | NA | NA | 41 |
Cube size: 10 mm | Lower drying time is required for the Kazan variety | |||||
Airflow velocity: 2.0 m s−1 | Lower color degradation was observed in the Tito variety | |||||
Drying temperature: 70 °C | Nandor and Tito varieties show more water absorption about 560 g/100 g | |||||
Hot air drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Nantes | Different temperature ranges does not show significant differences in solid shrinkage | NA | The Weibull model satisfactorily simulates the degradation kinetics of carotenoids 2.8 ± 1.2%, phenolic content 5.7 ± 1.0%, and antioxidant activity 3.6 ± 1.8% | 42 |
Airflow velocity: 3.8 ± 0.3 m s−1 | The Weibull model satisfactorily simulates the degradation kinetics of carotenoids 2.8 ± 1.2%, phenolic content 5.7 ± 1.0%, and antioxidant activity 3.6 ± 1.8% | |||||
During temperature: 40, 50, 60, 70, and 80 °C | Air temperature ranged between 52.6 and 57.7 °C, low effect on carotenoids, and phenolic and antioxidant content retention of 2.2% | |||||
Relative humidity: 48.5% | Air temperature ranged between 52.6 and 57.7 °C, low effect on carotenoids, and phenolic and antioxidant content retention of 2.2% | |||||
Hot air drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Karotka | A drop in lightness (L) was observed | NA | Retention of β-carotene is about 61–68% | 43 |
Slices dimension: thickness 5 mm and diameter 35 mm | ||||||
Drying temperature: 70 °C | ||||||
Fluidized bed drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Pusa Kesar | The fall rate period was very slow | NA | Maximum β-carotene content was retained at 50 °C | 36 |
Slice dimension: thickness 3 mm | Rehydration ratio 70 °C highest 6.03 | |||||
Blanching: 100 °C for 6 min | ||||||
Airflow velocity: 0.049 m s−1 | Retention in color parameters | |||||
Drying temperature: 50, 60, and 70 °C | Overall sensory acceptability | |||||
Microwave oven drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Pusa Kesar | The fall rate period was very slow | NA | Low retention of β-carotene content | 36 |
Slice thickness: 3 mm | Low retention of color parameters | |||||
Blanching: 100 °C for 6 min | ||||||
Power: 650 W | Lower overall sensory acceptability | |||||
Microwave oven drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Nanco | Variations in color A420 values for unblanched samples at 27, 37, 47, and 57 °C were 0.018, 0.058, 0.197, and 0.138; while blanched samples were found as 0.014, 0.033, 0.149 and 0.093 | NA | Degradation of β-carotene in blanched 69% and unbleached 86% | 44 |
Blanching: 90 °C for 7 min and unblanched | ||||||
Airflow velocity: 1.5 m s−1 | ||||||
Drying temperature: 60 °C | ||||||
Relative humidity: 6–10% | ||||||
Tray load: 3.0–3.4 kg m−2 | ||||||
Microwave oven drying | Slices | Slices thickness: 3, 4, and 6 mm | Fourier model gave better results coefficient of determination (R2) 0.9991–1.000, error sum of squares (SSE) ranging from 0.000121 to 0.001034, and root mean square error (RMSE) from 3.32 × 10−3 to 0.02274. Effective moisture diffusivity (De) ranged from 9.7422 × 10−10 to 1.9962 × 10−9 m2 s−1 while the drying constant (k) ranged from 5.7 × 10−5 to 0.00022 s−1 | NA | NA | 45 |
Power: 90 W, 100 W, and 120 W | ||||||
Microwave oven drying | — | Carrot varieties: Nantes | The highest value of ΔE was found for carrots dried at lower MW power (150 W) application and L* and a* values, the values of ΔE decreased as power increased | NA | The phenolic content of the carrot samples at microwave power levels of 150 and 200 W (0.50 and 0.67 W g−1) was found | 46 |
Power: 150, 200, 250, 300, 350, 400, and 450 W | Maximum terpenes compound were found in powdered samples dried with power levels (150 and 200 W) | |||||
Power value: 0.50, 0.67, 0.83, 1.00, 1.17, 1.33 and 1.50 W g−1 | ||||||
Fluidized bed drying | Cubes | Carrot varieties: Macon F1 | The intensity of heat and mass transfer during drying depends on the drying temperature | NA | NA | 47 |
Cube dimension: 1 cm3 | ||||||
Drying temperature: 60, 70, 80, and 90 °C | Moisture content and the rehydration ratio at 60 °C were higher than at other drying temperature temperatures | |||||
Fluidized bed drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 8–12.5 mm | The volume, diameter, and length ratio are correlated to shrinkage properties | NA | NA | 48 |
Air flow rate: 500–660 min−1 | ||||||
Inlet air temperature: 40–70 °C | Air velocity, temperature, and presence of inerts did not show significant effects on shrinkage properties | |||||
Fluidized bed drying | Cubes | Cubes dimensions: 4, 7, and 10 mm3 | The drying temperature and cube size affect energy efficiency | NA | NA | 49 |
Drying temperatures: 50, 60, and 70 °C | ||||||
Bed depths: 30, 60, and 90 mm | ||||||
Spray drying | Puree | Carrot: black carrot | Lower degradation of color parameters | The best results obtained at 150 °C for water solubility index and encapsulation efficiency | The retention of anthocyanin content, and antioxidant activity at 150 °C | 50 |
Inlet temperature: 150, 175, 200, and 225 °C | ||||||
Outlet temperature: 76, 86, 98, and 112 °C | ||||||
Aspirator air flow rate: 50 m3 h−1 | ||||||
Feed flow rate: 2.5 mL min−1 | ||||||
Spray drying | Puree | Carrot: black carrot | The maximum quality attributes at temperature 160 °C of L*, a*, b*, C* and H values, dry matter content and hygroscopicity properties | NA | Higher retention of anthocyanin content and antioxidant capacity at temperature 160 °C were observed | 51 |
Inlet temperature: 160, 180, and 200 °C | ||||||
Outlet temperature: 107, 118, and 131 °C | ||||||
Feed flow rate: 5 mL min−1 | ||||||
Spray drying | Juice | Carrot milk powder | The physical properties of carrot milk powder were a loose density was 0.535 ± 0.008 g cm−3, packed density was 0.606 ± 0.003 g cm−3, insoluble index of 2.280 ± 0.073 mL, and 0.378 ± 0.003 for water activity observed | The protein, fat, and fiber were 28.54 ± 0.278, 3.90 ± 0.068, and 1.73 ± 0.027 g/100 g, respectively | β-carotene content was 2.038 mg/100 g observed | 52 |
Inlet temperature: 165, 170, and 175 °C | ||||||
Outlet temperature: 60 °C | ||||||
Feed flow rate: 0.2, 0.25, and 0.3 kg h−1 | ||||||
Air pressure: 2 kg cm−2 | ||||||
Spray drying | Juice | Inlet temperature: 150, 160, and 170 °C | Higher inlet air temperature showed an increase in solubility, and hygroscopicity, and a decrease in moisture content, color value, bulk density, and product recovery | NA | NA | 53 |
Outlet temperature: 75 °C | Higher feed flow rate showed an increase in moisture content, color value, bulk density, product recovery, and a decrease in solubility and hygroscopicity | |||||
Feed flow rate: 80, 120, and 160 mL h−1 | ||||||
Air pressure: 2 kg cm−2 | The best quality carrot powder was achieved at an inlet air temperature of 160 °C and a feed flow rate of 120 mL h−1 | |||||
Freeze drying | Slices | Slices dimension: diameter 8 mm and length 10 mm | Rehydration-dried samples of PFG NMR and MRI show that cellular compartments were not restored and instead, a porous network with permeable barriers is formed | NA | NA | 54 |
Drying temperature: −28, −80, −150, and −196 °C | ||||||
Time – incremented temperature step: −30 °C up to 25 °C | ||||||
Pressure: 0.4 mbar | ||||||
Drying time: 27 h | ||||||
Freeze drying | Slices | Slices dimensions: length 4.5 cm, width 1.5 cm, thickness 1.5 cm | Retention of color, odor, and appearance characteristics | NA | NA | 55 |
Drying temperature: −21 °C | ||||||
Pressure: 85–90 Pa | Less effect on textural parameters, color measurements, and rehydration ratio of dried sample | |||||
Freeze drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Heitianwucun | Retention of volume shrinkage below 30% and low effect on color parameters | NA | Carotenoids and lutein content degreed up to fresh and blanching freeze-dried sample was 41.56% and 47.14% | 56 |
Slices dimension: diameter 4.5 cm and thickness 7 mm | ||||||
Blanching: steam blanching 110 °C for 3 min | ||||||
Drying temperature: −65 °C for 8, 16, 32, and 64 h | ||||||
Vacuum pressure: 0.12 mbar | ||||||
Microwave freeze drying | Slices | Slices dimensions: length 8 mm, width 8 mm, and thickness 8 mm | Higher energy consumption required | NA | Better retention of β-carotene and vitamin C content | 57 |
Microwave power: 2 W g−1 | ||||||
Vacuum pressure: 100 Pa | Higher sensory acceptability | |||||
Drying temperature: −40 °C | ||||||
Microwave vacuum drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 4 mm | High rehydration capacity | NA | Reduction in carotenoid content | 58 |
Blanching: 90 °C for 4 min | ||||||
Vacuum pressure: 40 mbar | ||||||
Rotation speed: 5 rpm | Radial shrinkage values ranged from 36.2 ± 5.0 to 46.1 ± 4.6% | |||||
Drying time: 24 to 42 min | ||||||
Infrared drying | Slices | Carrot varieties: Nantes | Shows good shrinkage, color, rehydration ratio, and density properties without affecting quality parameters | NA | NA | 59 |
Blanching: 98 °C for 3 min | ||||||
Drying temperature and time: 95 °C for 40 min, 100 °C for 30 min, and 105 °C for 15 min | ||||||
Infrared drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 6 mm and diameter 29.5 mm | The drying rate increased with increasing infrared power | NA | NA | 60 |
Power: 300, 400, and 500 W | ||||||
Air velocities: 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 m s−1 | The process parameters are effects on shrinkage, rehydration ratio, and color parameters | |||||
Infrared drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 1–2 mm | The drying rate almost doubled when the drying temperature was increased | NA | NA | 61 |
The model derived from the Midilli model gives the best result | ||||||
Drying temperature: 50, 60, 70, and 80 °C | Effective diffusion coefficient in the temperature range 50–80 °C was determined as, 7.295 × 10−11, 9.309 × 10−11, 1.140 × 10−10, 1.501 × 10−10 m2 s−1 | |||||
The activation energy was determined as 22.43 kJ mol−1 | ||||||
Infrared drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 5 mm and diameter 30.5 mm | Effect on the dried carrots water condition dramatically changing | NA | NA | 62 |
Power: 400, 600, and 800 W | ||||||
Air velocities: 1.0 m s−1 | Significant increases in the amount of immobilized water in the cytoplasm and extracellular space corresponded with significant decreases in the amount of free water in vacuoles, and the amount of immobilized water steadily decreased over time | |||||
Drying time: 10 h | ||||||
Infrared drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 5 mm | Infrared power affected the drying and quality characteristics such as rehydration and color parameters | NA | NA | 63 |
The Midilli model showed the best results | ||||||
Power: 62 to 125 W | Moisture diffusivity which varied between 2.45 × 10−9 and 7.38 × 10−9 m2 s−1 | |||||
The activation energy was estimated by a modified Arrhenius-type equation as 4.247 kW kg−1 | ||||||
Infrared drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 5 mm | NA | NA | The anthocyanin pigments as cyanidin-3-glucoside contents 211.4 and 870.3 mg/100 g, phenolic content 1448 and 3754 mg/100 g, and antioxidant activity 78.1 and 250 μmol Trolox/100 g were observed | 64 |
Blanching: 95 °C for 5 min | ||||||
Power: 7.875 kW m−2 | ||||||
Air velocities: 1.2 m s−1 | ||||||
Vacuum drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 5 mm and diameter 25 mm | NA | NA | Preserved β-carotene and color properties of dried sample | 12 |
PEF treatment: electric field strength (0.6 kV cm−1), number of trains (10 pulses and time 100 μs) | ||||||
Drying temperature: 25, 50, 75, and 90 °C | ||||||
Pressure: 0.3 bar | ||||||
Vacuum drying | Slabs | Slab dimensions: thickness 5 mm, length 40 mm, and width 20 mm | The pressure, temperature, and pre-treatments all improve the effective diffusivity of moisture transport | NA | NA | 65 |
Blanching: 90 °C for 5 min | ||||||
Drying temperature: 50 to 70 °C | ||||||
Pressure: 5, 15, and 25 kPa | ||||||
Vacuum drying | Cubes | Cube dimension: 1 cm3 | NA | NA | Low degradation of β-carotene content | 66 |
Pressure: 7 kPa | ||||||
Drying temperature: 60, 70, 80 °C | ||||||
Vacuum drying | Slices | Slices dimension: thickness 4 mm and diameter 2–3 mm | Ultrasound-treated samples reduce drying time by 41–53% | NA | Combination ultrasound treatment with a vacuum drying process retains the β-carotene and ascorbic acid content | 18 |
Ultrasound treatment: ultrasonic mode 10 s on and 5 s off for time 20 min | ||||||
Pressure: 0.02 and 0.03 MPa | Combination ultrasound treatment with a vacuum drying process retains the rehydration potential and textural properties | |||||
Drying temperature: 65 and 75 °C | ||||||
Conductive hydro drying | Pomace | Pomace parameters: homogeneous dough (80 g) and baking paper (8 pores per cm2; 1.4 mm pore size) with a 0.4 cm thickness, 10 cm width, and 15 cm length | Less drying time 150 min | NA | Retention of anthocyanin content and phenolic compounds | 67 |
Drying parameters: 50 μm BOPET corona-treated film, the water level was constant, and water temperature (95 °C) | Retained the color characteristics | |||||
Conductive hydro drying | Slices | Slices dimensions: thickness 0.2 and 0.4 cm and diameter 3 mm | Less drying time of 26–51% | NA | Retention of phenolic compounds | 68 |
Drying parameters: plastic film 0.017 cm thick, the water level was constant, and water temperature (74 and 94 °C) | Retention of color and texture characteristics | Reduction in antioxidant activity of 25.84% | ||||
Conductive hydro drying | Puree | Drying parameters: temperature (70, 80, and 90 °C) and NaOH solution concentration (0, 1, and 2% v/v) | Retention of color parameters at the untreated sample for 70 °C | NA | Higher retention of anthocyanins 86.5 mg/100 g at 70 °C | 69 |
2% NaOH solution and 90 °C retained total flavonoid content | ||||||
Supercritical drying | Slices | Slices dimensions: length 2.5 cm and diameter 0.4 cm | Retention of shape, less shrinkage, and color characteristics | NA | Low degradation of β-carotene content | 70 |
Drying parameters: temperature 50 °C, pressure 20 MPa for 2.30 h | Reduction of moisture content with increased temperature |
Apples and carrots were dried in a solar cabinet in a variety of shapes and sizes (slices and cubes). The results showed that air humidity and temperature inside the chamber showed a significant negative correlation, and weather conditions had an impact on the drying process as it takes more time to dry.73 Carrot slices are dried using solar drying method with blanching treatment (55, 65, and 75 °C for 45 min) and soaked in salt solution of different concentrations (5, 10, and 15% for 5 h). The optimum nutrient retentions observed were protein 5.25%, fat 2.17%, fiber 2.17%, and beta-carotene 71.94 ppm on dry weight for carrot samples treated at 55 °C, whereas the 5% salt solution shows fat 2.88%, fiber 2.46%, and beta-carotene 73.89 ppm on a dry weight basis.74 The different ranges of carrot thickness 0.3, 0.5, and 1.0 cm show significant effects on the drying of carrot slice samples.34 The slices with thickness of 1–2 mm were placed in solar drying, and the overall shrinkage ratio and drying ratio of carrot slices observed were 11:1 and 8.8:1, respectively. From the solar method, the yield of the dried carrot sample was 9.09%. In the solar-dried carrot sample, retention of protein of 97.22%, starch 91.32%, total sugar 90.04%, reducing sugar 89.34%, fat 94.56%, ascorbic acid 58.00%, β-carotene 72.15%, and energy value 92.00% was observed.15 The sun-dried sample had poor quality compared to the solar drying process, while in this drying process, a specific size of the sample was used for drying. The difficulties with the solar drying process include moisture condensation inside the dryer and the resulting increase in humidity percentage. Direct and indirect solar drying are two different methods of solar drying used for drying carrot samples.35,37,38
Carrot pomace was dried using various drying processes such as convective drying (55 and 65 °C), sun drying, and solar drying. The convective drying process required minimum drying time with higher retention of fiber, total carotenoids, β-carotene content, and minimum change observed in dried carrot color parameters.76 Aghbashlo et al.77 studied the energy and exergy analysis of the drying process in a semi-industrial continuous band dryer for the drying of carrot slices with thickness of 5 mm, and they were subjected to different drying temperatures such as 50, 60, and 70 °C, airflow rates of 0.61, 1.22, and 1.83 kg s−1, and feeding rates of 2.98 × 104, 3.48 × 104 and 4.16 × 104 kg s−1. The energy utilization and energy utilization ratio were varied in the range of 3.78–25.57 kJ s−1 and 0.1554–0.3752, and the exergy loss and exergy efficiency were found to be in the range of 0.6677–14.1577 kJ s−1 and 0.5527–0.9329, respectively. In another study, carrot slices were subjected to two different drying methods including tray drying and infrared drying at temperatures of 65, 70, 75, and 80 °C. The infrared drying method had a low moisture content compared to the tray drying method and also required more time for drying the carrot slices.78 The retention of β-carotene content increased from 9.86 to 11.57 mg/100 g while the ascorbic acid content retention dropped from 22.95 to 13.53 mg/100 g when the drying temperatures were raised from 60 to 75 °C. Based on the retention of β-carotene and ascorbic acid, the optimal drying temperature was found to be 65 °C for the drying of carrots.40
The carrot slices were dried using a microwave, halogen lamp–microwave combination, and hot-air drying method. A high-quality dried product was produced and the drying time was decreased by 98% when compared to traditional hot-air drying using microwaves at their highest power and a halogen lamp–microwave combination drying process. Also, a very low amount of color degradation was observed in the microwave drying process.81 In carrot pomace powder, the maximum retention of bioactive compounds including β-carotene, epicatechin, gallic, and ferulic acids was higher than in the hot-air drying process.68 In another study, carrots (cubes, discs, and sticks) were subjected to a microwave and a vacuum microwave. Both the drying processes were shown to impact the quality of dried carrots. The use of microwave vacuum drying shows an impact on the carrot's physical characteristics. The primary difference was that the samples dried in a vacuum microwave experienced less shrinking than samples dried in the microwave.82 The different ranges of microwave power levels affect the phenolic content of fresh carrots. The best range for drying to retain the phenolic content was reported to be between 150 and 200 W (0.50 and 0.67 W g−1).46 The effect of microwave vacuum drying, either standalone method or in combination with either hot air drying or vacuum drying on the carotenoid content in carrot slices was studied. The microwave drying method showed a better retention of carotenoid content compared with other drying methods.83 Nwajinka and Konjo45 used different models for studying the drying behavior of carrot slices in microwave oven drying. This study reported that the Fourier model gave the better coefficient of determination (R2) 0.9991–1.000, error sum of squares (SSE) ranging from 0.000121 to 0.001034, and root mean square error (RMSE) from 3.32 × 10−3 to 0.02274.
Rai and Jain85 investigated the freeze-drying of carrots and other popular vegetables. The ability to reconstitute, color appearance, taste, and storing stability of freeze-dried foods were evaluated. Vegetable pulao was found to have a higher acceptability score rating and could be kept in tightly sealed receptacles under nitrogen at room temperature. The benefits of freeze-drying include minimizing the loss of bioactive chemicals, increasing the stability of carrot pomace, homogenizing the components of the dried pomace, and facilitating quick and simple reconstitution. However, this drying method exhibits higher energy consumption and long processing is required. Voda et al.54 (2012) studied the effect of freeze-drying, blanching, and freezing rate pre-treatments on the microstructure and rehydration properties of carrots. Rapid freezing using blanching pre-treatment created a less connected and more anisotropic porous network, suggesting that more of the natural cell wall morphology is retained. The application of ultrasound pre-treatments at different power levels was shown to have a significant effect on freeze-dried carrot slices. The combination of ultrasound and freeze-drying significantly reduced the drying time from 698 min to 593 min.86 Rajkumar et al.55 compared the effect of hot air and freeze-drying methods on the physical parameters and aromatic profile of carrot. The physical parameters such as water activity, shrinking, hardness, cohesiveness, springiness, chewiness, rehydration ratio, and color are significantly affected in the convective drying of carrots. The study shows that the freeze-drying method has more retention of aromatic compounds than the hot-air drying process and the shrinkage of freeze-dried carrot rate (20.83%) is lower than the that of hot-air drying (35.53%) observed. In another study, black carrot juice was subjected to freeze drying at a constant temperature of −53 °C and a vacuum of 0.22–0.11 mbar with the constant feed mixture. The product that had the highest anthocyanin concentration, antioxidant activity, water solubility index, encapsulation effectiveness, and change in color was determined to be the best choice.50 In another study, probiotic carrot juice powder was prepared, and freeze-dried probiotic formulation was shown to have good storage stability up to one month (6–7logCFU per g) compared to the spray-dried formulation.87 Keskin et al.88 studied the influence of three drying methods (freeze-drying, intermittent microwave drying, and hot air convective drying) on the amounts and types of volatile and phenolic compounds of black carrot powders. From this study, it was reported that the freeze-drying method conserved the number of aromas to a greater extent, and its overall acceptability was higher than the others based on the sensory analysis parameters.
Carrot slices were dried using the application of ultrasonic vacuum (USV) drying and vacuum drying at 65 and 75 °C. The vacuum drying process showed a significant effect on the rehydration potential, nutritional value (retention of β-carotene and ascorbic acid), color, and textural properties of carrot compared to USV-dried carrot slices.18 The combination of vacuum drying with the hot-air drying method retains the carotenoid content of the carrot well within a short drying time.90 The degradation of beta-carotene content is less observed in the vacuum drying process as compared to the conventional air drying method.66 Using a combination of Pulsed Electric Fields (PEF) along with the vacuum drying process, the activation energy was 13.4 kJ mol−1 and the drying time was also reduced. The final dried product retains β-carotene and the color properties of the carrot sample.12 The pressure, temperature, and pre-treatments help to improve the effective diffusivity of moisture transport and drying time for a sample.18,65
Carrot juice powder's physical parameters including moisture content, solubility, hygroscopicity, bulk density, color, and product recovery depend on the spray drying process parameters.53 The process parameters used for spray drying including drying temperature (inlet and outlet), feed flow rate, atomizer speed, type of carrier, and carrier concentration have also shown significant effect on quality parameters.13 Quality carrot powder is obtained at 150–160 °C with maximum retention of bioactive compounds and antioxidant activity as well as water solubility index, encapsulation efficiency, and color change of the final product.50,51 The carrot milk powder prepared using the spray drying method's physical properties had a loose density of 0.535 ± 0.008 g cm−3, packed density of 0.606 ± 0.003 g cm−3, insoluble index of 2.280 ± 0.073 mL and 0.378 ± 0.003 water activity. The following contents were observed: protein 28.54 ± 0.278 g/100 g, fat 3.90 ± 0.068 g/100 g, and fiber 1.73 ± 0.027 g/100 g and β-carotene content was 2.038 mg/100 g.52 In another study, carrot and celery juice powder in the ratio (2:1; w/w) was prepared using a spray drying method optimized by Response Surface Methodology (RSM). This study showed that maltodextrin concentration, inlet temperature, and feed flow rate had significant effects on moisture content, water activity, hygroscopicity, β-carotene, and bulk density of the carrot–celery powder. The optimum temperature (130 °C), feed flow rate (36 mL min−1), and maltodextrin (0.87; w/w) retained the quality of the obtained powder.95 The spray-dried carrot powder obtained using carrier agents maltodextrin demonstrated better anthocyanin and antioxidant activity retention as well as higher encapsulation efficiency and solubility when compared to gum arabic and tapioca starch. Apart from these, when maltodextrin was used in the preparation of carrot juice, the shelf-life was increased by 70–220 times.50
Carrot slices were dried at different temperatures of 95, 100, and 105 °C for 15 to 40 min. The quality parameters such as shrinkage, color, rehydration ratio, and density properties were well maintained.59 When the infrared power increased, the drying rate of the carrot sample was increased but the processing parameters were affected, such as shrinkage, rehydration ratio, and color parameters.60,61,63 Xu et al.62 studied the effect of far-infrared drying of carrot slice samples (thickness 5 mm and diameter 30.5 mm) on the water state and glass transition temperature. The outcomes of this work showed significantly increased amount of immobilized water in the cytoplasm and extracellular space corresponding with significant decreases in the amount of free water in vacuoles, and the amount of immobilized water steadily decreased over time.
The conductive hydro drying method with drying parameters such as 50 μm BOPET corona-treated film and water temperature (95 °C) was used for the drying of black carrot pomace, which showed that for the drying process, 150 min time is required as compared to other drying methods. The end products showed similar color quality and yielded better preservation of color and phenolic compounds.67,68 Kaur et al.69 showed that from the study, the physical (color properties) and chemical parameters (anthocyanins and total phenolic content) were retained in dried carrot compared to other drying methods.
The drying process is one of the most energy-intensive processes, and the precise percentage of energy used for drying depends on the source. In different types of food industries with high energy demand for drying or dehydration, even a one percent improvement in energy efficiency can yield up to a ten percent increase in profit. In food processing sectors, any small amount of improvement in the energy efficiency of the processing steps will contribute to sustainable global energy development. Different types of indices have been used to evaluate how much energy drying equipment uses. The first law of thermodynamics is followed in energy analysis, which emphasizes the idea of energy conservation. One way to understand the word “energy efficiency” is as the ratio of the net energy used for drying (moisture evaporation) to the total energy input that the drying air provides.103,104 The analysis is based on exergy and its subsequent optimization in drying processes is gaining attention among researchers. Exergy represents the maximum work attainable from a substance, heat, or workstream when the substance reaches thermodynamic equilibrium with the surroundings through reversible processes. It measures the potential of a stream to induce change due to its instability relative to the reference environment.105 The exergetic performance assessments not only identify the magnitudes, locations, and causes of irreversibility in plants but also facilitate the determination of waste emissions and internal losses. The primary goal of exergy analysis in drying systems is to offer a comprehensive understanding of the process, quantify inefficiencies, assess energy consumption quality, choose optimal drying conditions, and minimize the environmental impact. Exergy analysis is increasingly applied to various products, and recent studies integrate both energy and exergy calculations for a more comprehensive analysis and sustainability evaluation of the drying process.104,105
In the context of drying processes, it is imperative to conduct an environmental analysis, particularly regarding the environmental impact of diverse energy sources employed. The following emission figures for CO2/kg of evaporated water are relevant for typical fossil fuels utilized in air heaters, natural gases (0.074 kg CO2/kg water), heavy fuel oil (0.11 kg CO2/kg water), and anthracite coal (0.13 kg CO2/kg water). When electricity serves as the primary energy source for drying, it becomes essential to factor in CO2 emissions at the generation site. The quantity of CO2 generated per kilowatt-hour of electric energy at the generation site is contingent on the method of electrical energy generation.103 Evaluating the economic elements of drying, such as the cost vs. potential economic benefits, is necessary for the systematic approach towards sustainability analysis.103,107 Drying costs typically fall into two categories: fixed costs, representing long-term investments unaffected by the production process, encompassing initial capital outlay, equipment, and building depreciation, interest on investment capital, insurance, fixed portions of taxes and rents, maintenance costs, and executive salaries. The second category is variable costs or operational expenses, linked to production levels and covering expenses like raw materials, energy, labor, bank interest on working capital, royalties, daily maintenance, and other direct costs.103,107,108
The comparisons between different drying technologies are used for carrot drying processing based on different key performance indicators of sustainability. The comparisons between different drying technologies for the case of carrot (1 kg) drying are based on power consumption (1 kW), drying efficiency (75%), and cost of electricity (0.13 kW h × 10₹/kW h = 1.30₹), shown in Table 2. Table 2 shows the highest energy input required to remove water for microwave and tray drying, while the lowest is for spray drying. However, significant investments in microwave drying and high risks of product overheating limit the adoption of this technology by the industry. Fluidized bed drying, conductive hydro drying, and rotary drying have approximately the same economic cost. However, freeze-drying requires more capital investment and a longer payback period. The choice of a drying method for sustainability depends on pre-processing cost, energy efficiency, drying rate, processing cost, and overall economic viability. Drying methods such as tray drying, fluidized bed drying, infrared drying, and conductive hydro drying exhibit favor sustainability aspects in this comparison.
Drying methods | Sample size (kg) | Initial moisture (%) | Final moisture (%) | Pre-processing cost (₹) | Water intake (kg) | Energy input per kg water removed (MJ kg−1) | Drying rate (kg min−1) | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tray drying | 1 | 85 | 5 | 0.5–1.5 | 0.7 | 600–1200 | 0.005–0.01 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: moderate | ||||||||
Temperature: low | ||||||||
Processing cost: low | ||||||||
Fluidized bed drying | 1 | 85 | 5 | 1.0–2.0 | 0.7 | 400–800 | 0.01–0.02 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: moderate | ||||||||
Temperature: low | ||||||||
Processing cost: low | ||||||||
Freeze drying | 1 | 85 | 5 | 3.0–5.0 | 0.7 | 1200–1800 | 0.001–0.005 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: rapid | ||||||||
Temperature: low | ||||||||
Processing cost: high | ||||||||
Infrared drying | 1 | 85 | 5 | 1.0–2.0 | 0.7 | 600–1000 | 0.01–0.03 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: rapid | ||||||||
Temperature: moderate | ||||||||
Processing cost: moderate | ||||||||
Microwave drying | 1 | 85 | 5 | 2.0–3.0 | 0.7 | 800–1400 | 0.02–0.04 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: rapid | ||||||||
Temperature: moderate | ||||||||
Processing cost: moderate | ||||||||
Conductive hydro drying | 1 | 85 | 5 | 1.5–2.5 | 0.7 | 400–800 | 0.02–0.04 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: rapid | ||||||||
Temperature: low | ||||||||
Processing cost: moderate | ||||||||
Spray drying | 1 L | 95 | 5–10 | 3.0–4.0 | 0.9 | 400–500 | 0.04–0.06 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: rapid | ||||||||
Temperature: moderate | ||||||||
Processing cost: high | ||||||||
Rotary drying | 1 L | 95 | 5–10 | 2.0–3.0 | 0.9 | 500–800 | 0.03–0.05 | Method type: artificial |
Drying speed: low | ||||||||
Temperature: low | ||||||||
Processing cost: moderate |
For the preservation of carrots slices, diced and whole carrots are blanched with water or steam, which helps in the prevention of browning and quality deterioration of processed carrots and allow for high-temperature condition or low-temperature conditions.109 Blanching treatment at 87.5 °C for a short duration of time leads to low quality and degradation of color, but treatment at 71 °C for 3–6 min helps to retain the quality of the product.110 Blanching treatments cause the thermal degradation of beta-carotene bioactive compounds.111 Negi and Roy112 found that after drying, blanched carrots had greater levels of retentions of beta-carotene and negligible effects on ascorbic acid content than untreated carrots sample, whereas blanching had no impact on non-enzymatic browning. Several studies show that steam blanching increases the level of total carotenoid content. The steam blanching process requires less time for a cut and small size of products.113 Apart from these methods, different thermal blanching treatments are also used for carrots such as microwave blanching, ohmic blanching, and infra-red blanching.114
The beta-carotene content in carrots is about 50%; thus, it should be incorporated into different kinds of products including biscuits, cake, bread, and other functional food products. The preparation of bakery products such as biscuits, buns, cookies, crackers, cakes, and muffins incorporates fruits and vegetable-based raw and processed ingredients to help enhance the quality characteristics and storage shelf life of the prepared products. The addition of carrot pomace tends to improve the color, physicochemical and bioactive, and sensory properties of cookies, biscuits, wheat rolls, buns, and cake bakery products.115
Carrot powder, shreds, and chops dried are used in the manufacturing of curry, halva, and biscuits. Non-alcoholic beverages have been prepared from carrot and their consumption has increased day by day due to the presence of high amounts of α and β-carotene and their health benefits.1 Various studies have suggested that the incorporation or blending of carrot juice with other fruits and vegetables can increase the nutritional value and acceptability of the prepared final product.116,117 In another study, a fermented non-dairy beverage was prepared from carrot, resulting in a distinctive flavor and aroma along with ensured microbiological safety and enhanced commercial value.69
Carrot pickle is prepared by lactic acid fermentation. The addition of potassium metabisulfite into the carrot pickle led to its preservation in excellent condition for 6 months at room temperature even in a non-air-tight container.118 Another way for the preservation of carrots by preserving candy by immersing it into sugar syrup has been developed so that the TSS content increases to 70–75 °Brix.119
Various types of sweet products are prepared from carrots.120 In Northern India, carrot halva is one of the famous products and it is prepared using heat treatment (cooking) with sugar and oil or milk fat and milk powder using the frying method.121 A honey-based carrot candy with different formulations was prepared by Durrani et al.122 In another study, carrot candy was prepared using sugar, coconut powder, and jaggery. In the prepared final product, the beta-carotene content was 11.2–13.2 mg/100 g.123 Carrot dessert mix was prepared from dried carrot with the addition of other ingredients such as milk powder, coconut powder, powdered sugar, and a small number of dry fruits, which is available in the market as “Kanwal Carrot Dessert” and prepared by mixing with three times water to fully rehydrate the product, following by the addition of clarified butter.124 The incorporation of carrots (fresh, juices, powder, puree, and extract) serves as a beneficial resource for the enrichment of different types of dairy products including cheeses, ice creams, and yogurts. This supplementation contributes to improving the rheological characteristics, physicochemical and color parameters, and sensorial and quality properties of the final product. Moreover, they are considered potential dairy product stabilizing agents due to their desirable functional properties, such as water binding and holding, gelling, and thickening ability.125,126 Saldana et al.127 have prepared a carrot-based ready-to-serve beverage by adding carrot juice with other fruit juices or skim milk. In yogurt preparation, the addition of 5–20% carrot juice before the fermentation process enhances the nutritional value and acceptability of the prepared yogurt.128–130 The fortification of these products with carrots increases the market share due to the high demand for goods for an improved diet, rich in compounds with antioxidant activity and biological properties.131
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3fb00162h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |