The aim of the present work was to develop two products from blackberry juice by freeze and spray drying with potential use as food colorants or healthy ingredients. A characterization of the physical and functional properties of the powdered juices was done. Maltodextrin or a mixture of trehalose and maltodextrin were assessed as carrier matrices. Freeze-dried, maltodextrin-containing powders presented the best retention of bioactive compounds and antiradical activity; however, they showed a narrow relative humidity range for storage in the glassy state. Spray-dried powders showed better physical properties, bearing higher glass transition temperature and lower molecular mobility than freeze-dried formulations.
The thermal stability of enzyme invertase in reduced-moisture model systems of maltodextrin (MD), polyvynilpyrrolidone (PVP; MW 40,000) and trehalose heated at 90ЊC was studied. Significant invertase inactivation was observed in heated glassy PVP and MD systems kept well below their glass transition temperature (T g ), but the enzyme was fairly stable in rubbery trehalose systems. However, at moisture contents which allowed trehalose crystallization rapid thermal inactivation of invertase was observed. Invertase inactivation in heated PVP, MD and trehalose systems of reduced-moisture could not be predicted on the basis of glass transition and this was particularly true for trehalose. Conditions which would allow collapse of the systems and crystallization of trehalose were fairly well predicted based on the estimated T g of model systems.
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