Yerba-mate; Drying methods;
Toasted yerba mate: Impact of drying methods on bioactive compounds, antioxidant capacity, and mate tea consumer acceptance Journal of Food Processing and Preservation , e15944This work investigates the consumer’s acceptance of hot and iced mate tea, bioactive compounds content and antioxidant capacity of toasted yerba mate leaves dried from various processes, aiming at presenting drying alternatives to the traditional, and mostly used, methods. Therefore, five drying methods were tested, traditional rotary dryer, conveyor dryer and three alternatives including microwave oven, over dryer at 40, 60, 80℃ and freeze-drying, which was followed by toasting. Overall, the microwave oven and freeze dryer were highly efficient and can be considered as drying alternatives with high values of total phenolic compounds (78.72 mg GAE g−1), antioxidant capacity by DPPH/ABTS (376.6 TEAC µmol g−1/1062.04 TEAC µmol g−1), caffeine (13.25 mg g−1) and caffeoylquinic acids (69 mg g−1). Using a reworked python script, the preference map of teas dried in microwave oven and freeze-drying resulted in similar sensory acceptance for hot tea, produced using traditional drying methods, with a slight decrease for the iced tea.