Antioxidant dietary fiber from food byproducts: case studies

Tânia Ribeiro, Diva Santos, Sara Marçal, Rita Sardão, Manuela E. Pintado

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

The food industry produces tons of byproducts per year, even before the consumption phase. During the cultivation, postharvest, and processing of fruits, vegetables and cereals were produced large amounts of food byproducts. Food byproducts have been described as a rich source of bioactive compounds associated with several health benefits such as phenolic compounds and dietary fiber. These bioactive compounds are generally studied separately. However, phenolic compounds have been found associated with dietary fiber, as linked components, conferring health-related properties, especially antioxidant capacity. A new dietary fiber concept, the antioxidant dietary fiber, has emerged and is explored in several vegetable byproducts. Antioxidant dietary fiber has become increasingly attractive to food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic industries due to its ability to confer not only nutritional and technological properties, but also bioactive beneficial health properties to products. In this sense, the purpose of the present chapter is to: (1) Clarify the concept of antioxidant dietary fiber; (2) Identify vegetable byproducts as potential resources of antioxidant dietary fiber; (3) Review the transformation processes of food byproducts into antioxidant dietary fibers as ingredients with potential to develop new functional food products; and (4) Illustrate the technological, nutritional, and health-benefit functionalities of antioxidant dietary fiber as a new functional ingredient.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationFood byproducts management and their utilization
EditorsGómez-García Ricardo, Vilas-Boas Ana A., Campos Débora A., Pintado Maria Manuela, Aguiar Cristóbal Noé
PublisherApple Academic Press
Chapter6
Pages127-146
Number of pages20
ISBN (Electronic)9781003377801
ISBN (Print)9781774912959, 9781774912966
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2024

Keywords

  • Antioxidant dietary fiber
  • Food byproducts
  • Health functionality
  • Technological functionality

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