Abstract

Black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) is a fruit with increasing popularity in consumption and processing. Recent research has strengthened the position of chokeberry as a source of phenolic compounds, antioxidants with high pro-health values, therefore it is important to investigate other substances protecting biologically active compounds during juice processing. This study was an attempt to reduce the loss of polyphenol in cloudy and clarified chokeberry juice by adding aqueous cinnamon and clove extracts. The results showed that the clarification of juices did not cause significant changes in the concentration of polyphenols. However, the addition of plant extracts prior to pasteurisation process influenced the content of phenolic compounds in the chokeberry juices. The main change in the composition of the chokeberry juices observed during storage was a result of the degradation process of anthocyanins. The research showed that, despite the common view about the beneficial effects of polyphenols and other compounds exhibiting mutual antioxidative potential, it is very difficult to inhibit the degradation process.

Highlights

  • Black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa, Rosaceae) is a perennial fruiting shrub that is gaining popularity [1,2]

  • The analysis showed that the addition of spice plant extracts to the unpasteurised juices caused a slight decrease in the anthocyanin content

  • Fresh chokeberry juice has high polyphenol content, which is related to its potential health-promoting effect; processing and storage can often influence polyphenol losses

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Summary

Introduction

Black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa, Rosaceae) is a perennial fruiting shrub that is gaining popularity [1,2]. The plant has various advantages: its fruits have great health-promoting potential, it is relatively easy to cultivate, and it yields large amounts of fruit [3,4]. The properties of chokeberry are mostly related with its high antioxidative activity that results from the presence of polyphenols, including cyanidin-3-O-glycosides (galactoside, arabinoside, xyloside and glucoside), quercetin (galactoside, glucoside, rutinoside, vicianoside and robinobioside), chlorogenic and neochlorogenic acids, and proanthocyanidins [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. The availability of fresh fruits is periodic (from mid-August to late September), and the short shelf-life necessitates their further processing. Chokeberries are processed into juices, dried fruits, jams, syrups, teas, tinctures, jellies, food colourings, dietary supplements, etc.

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