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Effects of processing methods on nutritional composition and antioxidant activity of mealworm ( Tenebrio molitor ) larvae
Author(s) -
Baek Minhee,
Kim MiAe,
Kwon YunSuk,
Hwang JaeSam,
Goo TaeWon,
Jun Mira,
Yun EunYoung
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
entomological research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.421
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 1748-5967
pISSN - 1738-2297
DOI - 10.1111/1748-5967.12363
Subject(s) - steaming , food science , mealworm , dpph , chemistry , antioxidant , abts , vitamin c , roasting , tocopherol , composition (language) , vitamin e , biochemistry , botany , biology , larva , linguistics , philosophy
We examined the effects of different processing methods on the nutritional composition and antioxidant activity of mealworms. After processing with nine methods, we calculated the contents of protein, fat, ash, carbohydrate, minerals (P, Ca, K, Fe, Na), vitamin B group (B 1 , B 2 , B 3 ), moisture, and calories. When processed by freeze drying among freeze drying, hot air drying, oven broiling, roasting, pan frying, deep frying, boiling, steaming, and microwaving, the contents of protein, some minerals, and vitamins were the highest. The content of total minerals was lowest after deep frying, and those of vitamin B 1 and B 3 were the lowest after microwaving. Antioxidant activity was then evaluated using DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging assays. DPPH assays showed that microwaving, freeze drying, deep frying, steaming, boiling, and oven broiling of mealworms yielded scavenging activities of 20.9–29.0% at 2,000 μg/mL, which was similar to the activity level (22.7–33.2%) of 40–60 μM tocopherol. ABTS assays confirmed that only freeze‐dried mealworms at 2,000 μg/mL exhibited higher activity than 10 μM tocopherol. Interestingly, similar trends were found for antioxidant activity levels and total phenolic contents in mealworms.