Premium
Spray drying encapsulation of red wine: Stability of total monomeric anthocyanins and structural alterations upon storage
Author(s) -
Alvarez Gaona Izmari Jasel,
Bater Caterina,
Zamora María C.,
Chirife Jorge
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of food processing and preservation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.511
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1745-4549
pISSN - 0145-8892
DOI - 10.1111/jfpp.13457
Subject(s) - maltodextrin , wine , chemistry , spray drying , food science , water activity , wine color , freeze drying , glycerol , acrylamide , monomer , chromatography , water content , organic chemistry , polymer , geotechnical engineering , engineering
Wine C. Sauvignon was encapsulated by spray drying to obtain a wine powder having a low water activity ( a w ). Maltodextrin DE 10 was added to wine before atomization. The retention of Total Monomeric Anthocyanins (TMA) in the wine powder was found to be above 83%. Wine powder was stored under various relative humidities, and TMA concentration was determined up to 120 days at 38 °C. Anthocyanins decreased steadily during storage and increasing RH% enhanced the losses. Results stressed the importance of a w (or RH%) as a key control parameter for anthocyanins stability during storage. Encapsulated wine collapsed when exposed few days to 58% RH and 38 °C; this was investigated by spray drying wine model systems containing various nonvolatile components of the dry extract, namely glycerol, organic acids, and monosaccharides. Structural alterations of encapsulated wine were attributed to glycerol, main component of dry extract and which has a very low glass transition temperature. Practical applications The main practical application of this work is that it allows the wine to be transformed into a freely flowing powder by the addition of maltodextrin before the atomization stage in spray drying. The encapsulated wine contains 5 times the concentration of anthocyanins than that in liquid wine (both expressed in mg/100 g). This is the first published work on spray drying of red wine.