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Impact of different drying methods on nutritional characteristics of carrot, sweet potato, and moringa leaf powder and the production of an extruded product

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dc.contributor.author Suwathy, M.
dc.contributor.author Vasantharuba, S.
dc.contributor.author Sarathadevi, R.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-04-21T03:25:27Z
dc.date.available 2025-04-21T03:25:27Z
dc.date.issued 2025
dc.identifier.uri http://repo.lib.jfn.ac.lk/ujrr/handle/123456789/11208
dc.description.abstract The increasing consumer demand for nutritious fast foods, particularly noodles, has necessitated the investigation of alternative ingredients. Therefore, this study focused on producing nutrient-enriched noodles. The objective of this research was categorized into two; 1. investigate the impact of different drying methods such as freeze drying (FD), cabinet drying (CD), microwave drying (MD), and oven drying (OD) on the nutritional characteristics of sweet potato, carrot, and moringa leaf powders, and 2. the selection of the optimal drying method and the development of nutritious noodles using selected dried powders. The MD was optimal for sweet potato (moisture content- 5.13±0.12%, ash- 3.59±0.08%, crude protein 3.5±0.25%, crude fat 0.35±0.04%, crude fiber 10.66±0.27%, total phenolic content (TPC) 67.58±7.39 mg GAE/100g, and total flavonoid content (TFC) 2.88±0.55 mg QE/100g). The CD was optimal for carrot powder (8.59±0.22% moisture, 2.64±0.13% ash, 8.17±0.53% crude protein, 6.02±0.52% crude fat, 7.25±0.32% crude fiber, 63.68±1.36 mg GAE/100g TPC, and 3.53±0.5 mg QE/100g TFC), whereas the FD was optimal for moringa leaf powder (5.49± 0.27% moisture, 9.67±0.20% ash, 27.42±0.39% crude protein, 5.93±0.07% crude fat, 8.16±0.68% crude fiber, 97.28±3.41 mg GAE/100g TPC, and 7.69±2.28 mg QE/100g TFC). The noodles were then formulated by incorporating optimal dried sweet potato, carrot and moringa leaf powders in various ratios. Among, the most promising noodle formulation was comprised of 90% sweet potato powder, 5% carrot powder and 5% moringa leaf powder according to nutritional (12.2±0.53% moisture, 4.53±0.04% ash, 10.28±0.22% crude protein, 1.02±0.06% crude fat, 3.6±0.35% crude fiber, 59.21±1.85% mg GAE/100g TPC and 10.95±0.32% mg QE/100g TFC) and cooking properties (optimum cooking time- 2.4±0.26 min, cooking yield- 298.37±14.26%, swelling index- 323.31±28.31%, cooking loss- 4.19±0.79% and water absorption capacity- 1.98±0.14 g/g). Overall, this study demonstrated the potential of incorporating sweet potato, carrot, and moringa leaf powders into noodles to develop a nutrient-enriched food product. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Nutrition society, Sri Lanka. en_US
dc.subject Carrot powder en_US
dc.subject Drying methods en_US
dc.subject Moringa powder en_US
dc.subject Nutrient-enriched noodles en_US
dc.subject Sweet potato powder en_US
dc.title Impact of different drying methods on nutritional characteristics of carrot, sweet potato, and moringa leaf powder and the production of an extruded product en_US
dc.type Conference paper en_US


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