UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Cruciferous vegetables like radish, broccoli and kale offer significant health benefits, especially when they are consumed as microgreens, or as young seedlings harvested early. The little plants contain nutrients such as vitamins; minerals; bioactive antioxidants, like polyphenols; and glucosinolates, which have cancer-fighting potential. But microgreens are highly perishable and lose nutritional value quickly. In an effort to boost the impact and accessibility of microgreens, a team of researchers at Penn State conducted a study of how hot air drying — a cheap and relatively easy preservation technique — affects the availability of key nutrients and plant compounds that benefit health.
“Microgreens increasingly are popular due to their high concentrations of health-promoting compounds, but their benefits have been limited because they’re highly perishable, lasting only one to two days at room temperature and seven to 14 days with refrigeration,” said team leader Joshua Lambert, professor of food science in the College of Agricultural Sciences, senior author on the study. “That limits their use, increases costs, and leads to food waste — especially in places without good refrigeration. So, there’s a clear need for preservation methods that keep nutrients intact.”
In findings published in Journal of Food Science, the researchers reported that radish microgreens, no matter at what temperature they were dried, retained a significant portion of nutrients.