Abstract

AbstractDrying is one of the oldest and most conventional methods used to preserve foods. Unique traditional methods have been applied for the drying of plant‐based food products. However, the disadvantage of this approach is the low drying rate, high energy, and processing costs accompanied by the loss of nutritional quality in food products. As a substitute, pulsed electric field (PEF) is a modern and promising technique that has various advantages over thermal treatments. Nowadays, it has become an area of innovation to meet increasing industrial demands. Application of PEF during drying and osmotic dehydration has beneficial impacts on the extension of shelf‐life, increases in storage stability, and improvement of nutritional quality. Upscaling the use of PEF from laboratory to industrial scale while maintaining productivity is an area for further research and development. The aim of this commentary review is to give an overview of a newly proposed PEF process, which improves drying rate, mass‐energy transfer, retention of bioactive compounds, and osmotic dehydration in food. PEF processing led to achieving the innovative development of a wide range of foods and was extended to solve environmental issues. Drying food products is the most promising area in the food industry which needs improvement in terms of achieving energy efficiency and cost‐effectiveness to dry food products with the maintenance of nutritional properties to adequate levels. In this regard, PEF could be a suitable and novel drying method to overcome the limitations of conventional drying methods which might open new horizons for valuable research in manufacturing dried fruits and vegetables on an industrial scale.

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