Phenolic and antioxidant capacity retention of potato peel waste as a function of cultivar, pretreatment and drying procedure

  • Shruti Sethi Division of Food Science and Postharvest Technology, ICAR- Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi- 110 012 (India)
  • Alka Joshi Division of Food Science and Postharvest Technology, ICAR- Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi- 110 012 (India)
  • Manoj Kumar ICAR-Central Potato Research Institute, Regional Centre, Modipuram- 250 110, Uttar Pradesh, India
  • Raghavendra HR Division of Food Science and Postharvest Technology, ICAR- Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi- 110 012 (India)
  • Pooja BK Division of Food Science and Postharvest Technology, ICAR- Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi- 110 012 (India)
  • Swarajya Laxmi Nayak Division of Food Science and Postharvest Technology, ICAR- Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi- 110 012 (India)
  • O P Chauhan DRDO-Defence Food Research Laboratory, Mysore- 570 011, India
Keywords: Potato peel, Boiling, Drying procedure, Phenolics, Antioxidant activity, Total flavonoids

Abstract

Drying procedures employed for potato peels (both raw and boiled) may adversely affect the useful bioactive
components present in them. This study envisaged the identification of a feasible drying procedure for handling
bulk potato peel waste for maximising the retention of phytochemicals in the peel powder. The total phenols (TP), flavonoids (TF) and antioxidant capacity (TAC) were assessed in peels of three commercial and one newly developed anthocyanin rich Indian potato cultivars in response to boiling pretreatment and varying drying procedures. Microwave drying (600W) was best in terms of drying rate for both raw and boiled peels. It yielded the greatest amount of TP and TF in the dried raw peel, irrespective of cultivar. Dried raw peels of an thocyanin rich Kufri Neelkanth cultivar exhibited maximum TAC. Retention of TF, metal scavenging activity and reducing power followed almost a similar pattern as TP irrespective of cultivar, pretreatment and drying procedure. Our study shows that potato peel from Kufri Neelkanth (raw) and Kufri Frysona (both raw and boiled) are best source of phenolics and flavonoids and can serve as a suitable matrix for extraction of bioactive compounds which holds promise for use in the food industry.

Published
2023-03-10
How to Cite
Sethi, S., Joshi, A., Kumar, M., HR, R., BK, P., Nayak, S., & Chauhan, O. (2023). Phenolic and antioxidant capacity retention of potato peel waste as a function of cultivar, pretreatment and drying procedure. Defence Life Science Journal, 8(1), 71-82. https://doi.org/10.14429/dlsj.8.18208
Section
Research Article