# The Effect of Freeze-Dried Cherry Pomace and Red Potato Pulp on the Content of Bioactive Substances in Pasta

**Authors:** Dorota Gumul, Wiktor Berski, Eva Ivanišová, Joanna Oracz, Marek Kruczek

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijms26136020 · 2025-06-23

## TL;DR

This study shows that adding freeze-dried cherry pomace to pasta significantly increases its health benefits by boosting antioxidant and polyphenol content.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is identifying cherry pomace as a superior by-product for enhancing pasta's bioactive compound content compared to red potato pulp.

## Key findings

- Pasta with 30% cherry pomace had the highest levels of polyphenols and antioxidant activity.
- Cherry pomace added more phytosterols and anthocyanins compared to red potato pulp.
- Some polyphenols in cherry pomace were unstable during pasta production.

## Abstract

Pasta, due to its convenience, follows bread as the most common cereal product in the human diet. Typical wheat pasta is a high-energy product, since it contains a large amount of starch; at the same time, it is characterized by a low content of health-promoting ingredients, such as dietary fiber, minerals, vitamins, and polyphenols. Food industry by-products, or even waste, can be applied as a source of many bioactive substances, thus enriching pasta with bioactive ingredients. Two by-products, Cherry Pomace (CP) and Red Potato Pulp (RPP) were applied as health-promoting supplements for wheat pasta, at three levels (10, 20, and 30%). The antioxidant potential of the resulting pasta was examined (by DPPH, ABTS, FRAP, and FOMO methods), and the antioxidant’s content was also tested. The amount of polyphenols determined by HPLC was higher in the case of CP than in RPP, and the main ones were 5-O-Caffeoylquinic acid and Cyanidin 3-O-rutinoside in CP, whereas for RPP it was Pelargonidin 3-(4‴-p-coumaroylrutinoside)-5-glucoside. Fortified pasta samples were characterized by a higher content of total polyphenols and phenolic acids, flavonoids, flavanols, and anthocyanins. In pasta with a share of CP, some polyphenols were unstable during pasta production. Pasta with a share of CP was characterized by very high antioxidant activity due to a high level of phenolic acids and anthocyanins acting synergistically. It was also characterized by a higher content of phytosterols. A 30% addition of CP into pasta is considered the most beneficial in terms of increasing the health-promoting properties of such a product.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** 5-O-Caffeoylquinic acid (PubChem CID 5280633), Cyanidin 3-O-rutinoside (PubChem CID 29231)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** DPPH (MESH:C004931), CP (-), phenolic acids (MESH:C017616), anthocyanins (MESH:D000872), ABTS (MESH:C002502), starch (MESH:D013213), flavonoids (MESH:D005419), polyphenols (MESH:D059808), 5-O-Caffeoylquinic acid (MESH:C473200), Cyanidin 3-O-rutinoside (MESH:C428983), phytosterols (MESH:D010840)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12250449/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12250449