Abstract:
The purpose of this work was to study the effect of drying on physicochemical
properties and nutritional quality of fruits, seeds and seed kernels of two species of
pumpkin; isolate and quantify their fruit starch; characterize the functional
properties of the seed oils and proteins; carry out elemental mineral analysis and
lastly formulate a food product based on pumpkin fruit flour-wheat flour blend. The
investigation was done on samples of Cucurbita maxima and Cucurbita moschata.
The treatment structure involved fruits with rind and those without rind (fruit pulp),
whole seeds and seed kernels, and raw and dry samples (flours). Proximate
composition of raw C. moschata fruit with rind was 87.9 % moisture (fresh weight),
1.6 g/100g crude ether extract, 4.9 g/100g crude protein, 10.9 g/100g crude fibre, 6.7
g/100g crude ash, and 76.0 g/100g nitrogen free extract (by difference) on dry
weight basis. The corresponding values for C. maxima were 87.0 g/100g, 2.0
g/100g, and 3.9 g/100g, 9.6 g/100g, 6.9 g/100g, and 77.6 g/100g respectively. C.
moschata fruit with rind contained significantly (p<0.05) higher crude protein and
crude fibre than C. maxima. Proximate analysis of the seeds showed that C. maxima
whole seeds had significantly (p<0.05) higher moisture, crude fat and crude protein
content than C. moschata seeds. The results indicated that the pumpkin seeds are
rich in lipids and proteins. Physicochemical analysis of oil extracted from C.
maxima and C. moschata seeds showed that they are highly unsaturated. The lipid
profile of the pumpkin seed oil indicated that the major unsaturated fatty acids were
oleic and linoleic. Fruits and seeds contained varying amounts of potassium (K),
phosphorus (P), magnesium (Mg), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), Iron (Fe), calcium
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(Ca), copper (Cu) and sodium (Na). The fresh fruits with rind of C. maxima had
significantly (p<0.05) higher amounts of starch (9.5 % f. w) and β-carotene (582.7 ±
3.9 μg/g d.w) than C. moschata fruit with rind that had corresponding values of 3.8
mg/100g and 534.5±10.2 μg/g on dry weight basis respectively. Emulsifying activity
of pumpkin seed proteins ranged between 42-46 %, while foaming activity ranged
between 26-43 %. The cake flavour at 5% pumpkin flour replacement level was the
most acceptable. The results show that pumpkin seeds and fruits could be processed
and potentially added to various food systems to improve nutrient content and as
functional ingredients, hence their increased production, processing and utilization
should be encouraged.