Development and sensory evaluation of an improved beverage from Nigeria's Tamarind ( Tamarindus indica L.) fruit
Tamarind (Tamarindus indica L.), an indigenous underutilised tree fruit, has many valuable properties and almost every part of the tree is utilised by rural and urban dwellers. Nigerian tamarind fruits are grossly underutilised, with the rural dwellers utilising some of the fruits in beverage produc...
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Published in | African journal of food, agriculture, nutrition, and development : AJFAND Vol. 10; no. 9; pp. 4079 - 4092 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Kenya
Rural Outreach Program
01.09.2010
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Tamarind (Tamarindus indica L.), an indigenous underutilised tree
fruit, has many valuable properties and almost every part of the tree
is utilised by rural and urban dwellers. Nigerian tamarind fruits are
grossly underutilised, with the rural dwellers utilising some of the
fruits in beverage production using ancient processing methods. The
ancient processes of manufacture are cumbersome, slow, non-hygienic and
highly subjective, often resulting in non-uniform and low quality
products which are less preferred to commercial imported ones.
Furthermore, traditional tamarind beverage is not as popular among the
populace as other traditional beverages. There is therefore a need to
develop simple and affordable process of producing standard tamarind
beverage which would be widely accepted by Nigerians. A simple,
improved processing method was developed based on the traditional
method of manufacturing tamarind beverage using the modified
one-factor-at-a-time method to determine the experimental levels of the
various ingredients used in the formulation of the beverage. A pilot
study was carried out to determine the acceptable range of pulp to
water blend. The beverages were evaluated by the paired preference,
hedonic rating and multiple comparison tests using 50 semi-trained
assessors within the age range of 18 and 45 years. The results of the
paired preference tests were expressed as levels of significance while
the mean scores of hedonic rating tests were subjected to analysis of
variance. Tukey′s test was used to separate the means. Samples of
tamarind beverages produced by the traditional and improved processing
methods were analysed for colour, pH, total acidity, soluble solids,
ascorbic acid, total solids, browning index and cloudiness using
standard methods. The colour (A 325nm ), cloudiness (A 660nm ),
browning index (A 420nm ) and ascorbic acid (mg/100ml) of the
traditional and improved beverages were 0.91±0.25, 0.68±0.16,
1.42±0.04, 9.5±0.69 and 0.60±0.01, 0.13±0.01,
0.19±0.01 and 10.4±0.21, respectively. While the traditional
processing method took 10 hours to produce about 10 litres of beverage,
the improved processing method took 2 hours to produce 250 litres of
beverage. The improved beverage was rated much higher in terms of
colour, aroma, taste and overall acceptability than the traditional
beverage and compared favourably well with a similar commercial
beverage. A beverage with more acceptable qualities than the
traditional beverage was thus produced from the improved processing
method. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1684-5358 1684-5358 1684-5374 |
DOI: | 10.4314/ajfand.v10i9.62888 |