Abstract:
The present study was conducted to evaluate the effect of various pretreatments and drying
methods on the drying characteristics and quality of dried papaya (Carica papaya l.) slices. The
experiment was planned with two factors: drying methods and pretreatments. It consisted of
sixteen combinations of treatments executed in factorial experimental design. All samples were
analyzed in triplicates. The drying methods were refractance window dryer, oven dryer, solar
dryer, and sun, while the pretreatments were hot water blanching, corn starch coating, lemon
juice dip, and control. The drying characteristics, physicochemical properties, proximate
composition, antioxidants, total carotenoid, color, microbial loads, and sensory acceptance
were evaluated. The drying characteristics of the papaya slice such as coefficient of regression
(R2
) and chi-square (χ2
), resulted in values within the range of 0.962 to 0.998 and 0.000238 to
0.00561), respectively. The Page model gave a higher R2
value 0.9666 to 0.9988 over the other
models. The results showed that the pretreatments and drying methods significantly affected the
physicochemical properties, proximate composition, antioxidants, total carotenoids, colour,
microbial load, and sensory acceptance of the dried papaya slices. The nutrient analysis showed
that papaya slices ranged from 4.68 to 5.29, 31.11 to 49.74ºBrix, 0.63 to 0.92 g/100g, and 9.09
to 19.83 N for pH, TSS, TA, and hardness, respectively. Similarly, papaya slices' moisture, fat,
fibre, protein, ash, and carbohydrate contents were found to be 6.50 to 9.77%, 1.25 to 1.98%,
4.99 to 5.68%, 2.16 to 2.60%, 2.11 to2.21%, and 78.96 to 82.46%, respectively. The ascorbic
acid and total carotenoid contents were affected by drying methods and had respective values
of 28.16 to 42.19mg/100 g, and 41.67 to 92.88 µg/g. Regarding the color of dried papaya slices,
the values ranged from 49.22 to 53.87, 20.57 to 23.66, 54.86 to 61.21, and 4.07 to 11.29 for L*,
a*, b*, and ΔE color values, respectively. It could be inferred that the total plate count of dried
papaya slices ranged from 2.3102
to 5.9103CFU/g, while yeast and mold counts were 1.3101
to 3.9 101CFU/g. It can be concluded that the overall acceptance of dried papaya slices was
good during the three months of storage periods.