Abstract

Drying is one of the oldest methods for food preservation that removes the water from fruit and makes it available for consumption throughout the year. Dried fruits can be produced by small- and large-scale processors, which makes them a very popular food among consumers and food manufacturers. The most frequent uses of drying technology include osmotic dehydration, vacuum drying, freeze-drying and different combinations of other drying technologies. However, drying may provoke undesirable changes with respect to physiochemical, sensory, nutritional and microbiological quality. Drying process energy efficiency and the quality of dried fruits are crucial factors in fruit drying. Recently, innovative technologies such as ultrasound, pulsed electric field and high pressure may be used as a pretreatment or in combination with traditional drying technologies for process intensification. This could result in quality improvements of dried fruits and enhanced efficiency and capacity of the production process, with a positive impact on environmental and economic benefits.

Highlights

  • The term drying usually refers to the operation by which the moisture present in a material evaporates because of heat and matter exchange between the product and the working medium

  • This review presents the effects of different drying technologies and following treatments and/or pretreatments on dried fruits by providing the most important quality aspects

  • Modified atmosphere heat-pump drying (MAHPD) were compared to vacuum drying and freeze drying, it turned out that modified atmosphere heat-pump drying (MAHPD) led to better physical properties, such as reduced shrinkage, decreased firmness and more porous structure of the materials, which resulted in quicker rehydration

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Summary

A Review

Milivoj Radojčin 1, *, Ivan Pavkov 1 , Danijela Bursać Kovačević 2 , Predrag Putnik 3 , Artur Wiktor 4 , Zoran Stamenković 1 , Krstan Kešelj 1 and Attila Gere 5.

Introduction
Drying of Fruits
Convectional Hot Air Drying
Osmotic Drying
Microwave Drying
Quality of Dried Fruits
Physical Quality
Chemical Quality
Nutritional Quality
Sensory Quality
Comparison of Drying Methods
Scheme
Ultrasound
Pulsed
High Hydrostatic Pressure
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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