Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Raspberry snack, as a novel berry product, has rich favor and high crisp taste, where controllable texture quality is conducive to the palatability of the snack. Determinative factors of microwave puffing in microwave intensity and duration and key property of material in Young's modulus were introduced to investigate the formation of texture quality of berry snack under microwave puffing. The results indicate that the microwave intensity has negative correlation with Young's modulus of raspberry chips, which causes the more porosity inside under microwave puffing. Reasonable Young's modulus of raspberry chips enhances the interior porosity and exterior expansion volume of raspberry snack due to the water vapor wrapped other than escaped. The greater microwave intensity results in the higher volume expansion of raspberry chips, in which the great volume expansion from porous pores structure confers moderate hardness. In microwave puffing, the formation of hardness and crispness of raspberry snack depend on microwave puffing parameters, leading to high temperature and great dehydration rate in quick puffing duration, in addition to Young's modulus of raspberry chips, where high dehydration rate accelerates water removal inside raspberry chips to form a harder texture with decreasing springiness, whereas low dehydration rate leads to the gentle change of springiness. Raspberry snack with uniform internal pores and regular shape forming desirable texture may be achieved under the microwave intensity of 7.5 W/g and the puffing duration of 6 min. This study indicates that high-quality raspberry snack may be achieved via controlling heating rate in microwave puffing.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jtxs.12646DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

microwave puffing
28
raspberry snack
24
raspberry chips
20
microwave intensity
16
young's modulus
16
texture quality
12
modulus raspberry
12
dehydration rate
12
raspberry
11
microwave
11

Similar Publications

This study builds on the previous research that explored the effects of different pre-drying methods on the quality of reduced-fat white cheese (RFWC) snacks before explosion puffing drying (EPD). The microwave + freeze hybrid drying (MD + FD) method was identified as the optimal pre-drying approach, with a target moisture content of 45 g/100 g in the RFWC sample, based on textural, chemical, color, and sensory attributes. In this continuation study, the MD + FD pre-drying method and moisture content were maintained, whereas response surface methodology (RSM) with a Box-Behnken design was applied to optimize the EPD process parameters for producing high-protein RFWC snacks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The objective of this study was to study the effect of microwave vacuum puffing (MVP) conditions on dielectric properties of berries. A central composite response surface experiment, with four factors and five levels, was carried out to assess the effect of puffing conditions on the dielectric properties. The microwave volumetric heat, dielectric constant and dielectric loss factor were, accordingly, evaluated based on the dynamic dielectric property index model of berries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microwave vacuum drying (MVD) is a promising technology that can be used for creating cheese puffs. In this study, the effects of vacuum level (2-14 kPa), specific microwave power input (1-3 W⋅g), and sample geometry on the drying and expansion behavior of low-moisture, part-skim mozzarella cheese during MVD were investigated. The created MVD cheese puffs' moisture content, water activity, area ratio, texture, and color were determined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study focused on persimmons and applied variable-temperature pressure-differential puffing drying to produce persimmon chips. The effects of puffing pressure, holding time, drying temperature, and duration on moisture content, crispness, and sensory scores were examined. The optimal parameters determined via response surface methodology were a pressure differential of 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To enhance the pore structure of green coffee beans (GCB) and detect the sorption capacity and extraction characteristics of flavor compounds before roasting, this study employed several methods: hot air drying (HD), freeze-drying (FD), 3-levels short-time heating with puffing (SHP, SHP, and SHP), and 3-levels microwave with puffing (MWP, MWP, and MWP). These methods were applied to GCBs pre-soaked in water for different times. The effects of these treatments on color change, porosity, microstructure, citric acid sorption capacity, and caffeine and chlorogenic acid extraction yield were investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF