The use of leftover coffee grounds as an antioxidant dietary fibre is a lowcost valueadded opportunity for an otherwise waste product, say Spanish researchers.
About two kilograms of wet spent coffee grounds are produced for every kilogram of instant coffee made, which constitutes to about six million tonnes each year globally.
While uses in biofuels, composts, animal feed and enzymes have been explored, researchers from Madrid say there is now an increasing interest in food and health uses for the byproduct.
According to their paper in the journal Food Chemistry, spent coffee grounds from industrial instant coffee are a promising natural source of antioxidant insoluble dietary fibre, proteins, essential amino acids and low glycaemic sugars, which could be used in bakery products in the future.
“These food formulations might be destined to people with reduced energetic intake and particular requirements,” wrote the team from the Autonoma University of Madrid (UAM) and the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC).
“The application of spent coffee grounds which we propose represents a valueadded opportunity for coffee byproducts utilisation at a very low cost.”
One of the researchers behind the paper, Dr Maria Dolores del Castillo, told us the ingredient’s antioxidant potential added another attractive benefit to the fibre source.
“They are bioavailable antioxidants as they are using the dietary fibre as transport to the gastrointestinal tract,” said Dr. Dolores del Castillo, senior scientist and head of the Food Bioscience Group at the UAM’s Institute of Food Science Research (CIAL).
“This should be cheaper [than other fibre sources] because it is a very abundant byproduct.”
She said one manufacturer of coffee reported producing two tonnes of the grounds a day.
The paper comes as part of the research project SUSCOFFEE, which was backed by a €185,000 grant from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness.
Her team was now seeking companies interested in the development and commercialisation of the food formulation under patent license.
“Its use as healthy food ingredient is a contribution to the bioeconomy and the reduction of the environmental impact of the coffee processing. The intake of antioxidants and particularly of antioxidant dietary fibre is suggested for the prevention of chronic diseases and the improvement of the gastrointestinal health,” said Dolores del Castillo.
Testing the recipe
Using grounds from Spanish private label coffee maker Prosol, the researchers made up six different sugarfree sample biscuits with varying amounts of the grounds ranging from 3.5–4.4%.
Each prototype would be able to make the nutritional claims ‘source of fibre’ at more than 3 g fibre per 100 g biscuit or ‘high fibre content’ with over 6 g fibre per 100 g biscuit in the EU.
Stevia was also used for sweetness as well as BeneoOraftidonated oligofructose as an enhancer of glucose tolerance and prebiotic source.
Dolores del Castillo said taste of adding the grounds – which leads to a similar appearance in the biscuits to chocolate chips – was masked by these two ingredients.
Source: Nutraingredients