Foods, Vol. 15, Pages 1919: Linking Soil–Orchard Fruit Quality and Circular Food Innovation Through the Valorization of Dried Cherry Pomace in Dairy-Based Spreadable Products

Fuente: Foods - Revista científica (MDPI)
Foods, Vol. 15, Pages 1919: Linking Soil–Orchard Fruit Quality and Circular Food Innovation Through the Valorization of Dried Cherry Pomace in Dairy-Based Spreadable Products
Foods doi: 10.3390/foods15111919
Authors:
Mariana Rusu
Irina Gabriela Cara
Iuliana Motrescu
Florina Stoica
Denis Constantin Țopa
Gerard Jităreanu

This study explored the link between orchard-derived cherry quality and circular food innovation through the valorization of dried cherry pomace. Sweet cherry fruits from the cultivars Van and Stella, grown under the pedoclimatic conditions of north-eastern Romania, were evaluated for physicochemical traits, phytochemical profile, antioxidant activity, and heavy metal content. In parallel, cherry pomace obtained during juice processing of cultivar Van was freeze-dried, characterized, and incorporated into dairy-based spreadable formulations at 5% and 10% addition levels in order to assess its bioactive potential. The results showed clear cultivar-dependent differences, with Van exhibiting a superior bioactive profile, including higher total polyphenols, flavonoids, anthocyanins, and antioxidant activity than Stella. Heavy metal concentrations in fruits remained below the maximum allowable limits, while health-risk indices indicated no significant non-carcinogenic risk (HI = 3.18 × 10−2). The dried cherry pomace powder was characterized by high dietary fiber content (49.83 g/100 g dw), substantial total polyphenols (1046.80 mg GAE/100 g dw), anthocyanins (123.27 mg C3G/100 g dw), and antioxidant activity (21.43 μM TE/g dw). Its incorporation into dairy-based spreadable products significantly improved ash, carbohydrate, fiber, phytochemical content, and antioxidant activity, with the 10% level showing the highest functional enhancement. Sensory evaluation indicated that the 5% formulation achieved the most balanced and preferred overall sensory profile. Overall, the findings support dried cherry pomace as a valuable functional ingredient and highlight a practical circular strategy for reconnecting cherry by-products with value-added food applications.