Abstract

Dried press residue of cloudberry [Rubus chamaemorus (Rosaceae)] was extracted with carbon dioxide at pressures of 90−300 bar and at a temperature of 40 or 60 °C using a pilot-scale or a production-scale plant. The yield of the extract at the highest pressure was approximately 15% less than that obtained with Soxhlet extraction using diethyl ether as solvent. The extracts were either solids or viscous oils depending on the amount of neutral lipids, which increased with increasing pressure. No significant differences in the composition of the major constituent fatty acids in any of the extracts were found. The color of the extracts was clearly dependent on the amount of carotenes, which consisted mainly of β-carotene. The content of carotenes in the extracts did not increase at pressures higher than 150 bar. The amount of tocopherols in the extracts obtained at highest pressure was found to be approximately 3 times less than that at lower pressures. Countercurrent CO2 extraction of the cloudberry oil extra...

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