Title of article :
Progressive Freeze Concentration of Coconut Water and Use of Partial Ice Melting Method for Yield Improvement
Author/Authors :
Jayawardena, J. A. E. C. Department of Food Science and Technology - Faculty of Applied Sciences - University of Sri Jayewardenepura - Gangodawila - Nugegoda - Colombo, Sri Lanka , Vanniarachchy, M. P. G. Department of Food Science and Technology - Faculty of Applied Sciences - University of Sri Jayewardenepura - Gangodawila - Nugegoda - Colombo, Sri Lanka , Wansapala, M. A. J. Department of Food Science and Technology - Faculty of Applied Sciences - University of Sri Jayewardenepura - Gangodawila - Nugegoda - Colombo, Sri Lanka
Abstract :
Coconut water is a highly nutritious liquid food which is a by-product of the desiccated coconut industry. Freeze concentration is
the most suitable concentration method for coconut water since the low-temperature operation for concentration does not
deteriorate the original quality of coconut water. Suspension freeze concentration (SFC) and progressive freeze concentration
(PFC) are the available FC methods, and SFC is a complex and expensive method compared with PFC. PFC is a novel freeze
concentration technique to concentrate liquid food by using a simple system. The limitation of PFC is the lower product yield
than SFC, and to overcome the problem, the partial ice-melting technique can be used. A simple cylindrical apparatus was used
for PFC which consists of a sample vessel, agitator system, and a cooling bath (at −23°
C±2°
C temperature). The final
concentration of the liquid product was directly affected by the apparatus agitator speed and sample vessel dipping speed. PFC
agitator speed of 290 rpm and dipping speed of 1.3 cm h-1 were reported as the optimum operating conditions to achieve the
highest concentration for the PFC apparatus used in this study. Using optimized agitation speed and dipping speed, coconut
water was concentrated up to Brix 8.5° from the initial concentration of Brix 3.5°
. PFC coconut water achieved 73.56% of total
yield, 2.42 of concentration ratio, 0.7° of ice phase concentration, and 0.08 of effective partition coefficient. The partial melting
technique was successfully explored by recovering initial ice fractions with high solute concentrations, and the total yield was improved up to 80%.
Keywords :
Progressive Freeze Concentration , Coconut Water , Partial Ice Melting Method , Yield Improvement
Journal title :
International Journal of Food Science