Analysis of Apple Candying by Microwave Spectroscopy

Foods. 2019 Aug 4;8(8):316. doi: 10.3390/foods8080316.

Abstract

Process control in the industry requires fast, safe and easily applicable methods. In this sense, the use of dielectric spectroscopy in the microwave range can be a great opportunity to monitor processes in which the mobility and quantity of water is the main property to produce a quality and safety product. The candying of fruits is an operation in which the samples are first osmotically dehydrated and then exposed to a hot air-drying operation. This process produces changes in both the structure of the tissue and the relationships between water, the solid matrix and the added soluble solids. The aim of this paper is to develop a dielectric tool to predict the water/sucrose states throughout the candying of apple, by considering the complexity of the tissue and describing the different transport phenomena and the different transition processes of the sucrose inside the sample.

Keywords: candying; dehydration; dielectric spectroscopy; hot air drying; isotherms; permittivity; sucrose.