Influence of drying methods on isoflavones, soyasaponins, fatty acids, and aroma profiles in Thai fermented black soybean (thua nao)

dc.contributor.authorPakavit Mathatheeranan
dc.contributor.authorThanakorn Wongprasert
dc.contributor.authorWei-Yuan Wu
dc.contributor.authorHuei‐Ju Wang
dc.contributor.authorHsin-Jo Chang
dc.contributor.authorSuet-Yine Woo
dc.contributor.authorHong‐Jhang Chen
dc.contributor.authorMingchih Fang
dc.contributor.authorInthawoot Suppavorasatit
dc.contributor.authorTing-Jang Lu
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-08T19:26:41Z
dc.date.issued2026-3-27
dc.description.abstractDrying treatments significantly influenced non-volatile and volatile components in dried thua nao products. The effects of four drying methods, including natural sun drying (SUN), hot air oven drying (HOT), microwave vacuum drying (MIC), and vacuum oven drying (VAC), on isoflavone, soyasaponin, fatty acid, and aroma-active compound profiles were evaluated using mass spectrometry technique. The results showed that the profiles of isoflavones, soyasaponins, and aroma-active compounds were significantly affected by drying treatments, whereas fatty acid contents showed less pronounced differences. The SUN-treated samples contained higher levels of aroma-active compounds, while SUN treatment showed the greatest degradation of isoflavones and soyasaponins. In contrast, vacuum-based drying treatments (MIC and VAC) effectively preserved isoflavone, soyasaponin compounds but resulted in a loss of aroma-active compounds. The HOT treatment, as recommended drying method, provided both aroma-active compounds and retained isoflavones and soyasaponins. This research revealed the correlations among isoflavones, soyasaponins, and aroma components. • Microwave vacuum drying significantly preserved isoflavones and soyasaponins • Non-volatile breakdown correlated with aroma-active volatiles formation • Different drying methods did not significantly affect total fatty acid composition • First report in UHPLC-HRMS profiling of isoflavones in dried thua nao products
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.jafr.2026.102883
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.kmitl.ac.th/handle/123456789/20724
dc.publisherJournal of Agriculture and Food Research
dc.subjectPhytoestrogen effects and research
dc.subjectGABA and Rice Research
dc.subjectTea Polyphenols and Effects
dc.titleInfluence of drying methods on isoflavones, soyasaponins, fatty acids, and aroma profiles in Thai fermented black soybean (thua nao)
dc.typeArticle

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