Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera) and Its Promising Potential in Developing Functional Energy Bars: Review of Chemical, Nutritional, Functional, and Sensory Attributes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Date Fruit
2.1. Production of Date Fruit
2.2. Nutritional Characteristics of Date Fruit
2.2.1. Carbohydrates
2.2.2. Dietary Fiber
2.2.3. Lipids
2.2.4. Proteins
2.2.5. Vitamins and Minerals
2.2.6. Phytochemicals
Range | Reference | |
---|---|---|
Vitamins | ||
B complex (mg 100 g−1) | ||
Thiamine | 0.050–0.66 | [7] |
Riboflavin | 0.060–0.66 | |
Niacin | 1.27–1.61 | |
Vitamin E (ng 100 g−1) | ||
α-Tocopherol | 0.07–0.21 | [8] |
β-Tocopherol | 0.01–0.03 | |
γ-Tocopherol | 0.01–0.04 | |
Vitamin C (mg 100 g−1) | 2.4–17.5 | [1,25,28] |
Vitamin A (mg 100 g−1) | 0.001 * | [28] |
Vitamin K (μg 100 g−1) | 2.7 * | [34] |
Minerals (mg 100 g−1) | ||
Potassium | 289.6–2220 | [7] |
Calcium | 39–187 | |
Magnesium | 43–150 | |
Sodium | 1–8.9 | |
Phosphorus | 12–64 | |
Iron | 0.9–4.94 | |
Zinc | 0.29–0.65 | |
Total Phenolic Content | ||
(mg GAE 100 g−1) | 26.47–27,106.76 | [12] |
(mg FAE 100 g−1) | 134–343 | [37] |
2.3. Functional/Pharmacological Effects of Date Fruit
2.3.1. Antioxidant Effects
2.3.2. Anti-Inflammatory Effects
2.3.3. Anti-Hyperglycemic Effects
2.3.4. Anti-Hypercholesterolemia Effects
2.3.5. Anti-Tumor Effects
2.3.6. Other Effects
3. Date Bars
3.1. Possible Functional Ingredients Used in Date Bars
3.2. Formulation of Date Bars
3.3. Potential Functional Effects of Date Bars
Date Variety | Date Bars’ Ingredients | Proximate Composition (Average) | Minerals/Vitamins and Other Bioactive Attributes (Average) | Sensory Attributes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ND * | T0 (Control): Dates (100%) T1–T3: Dates (75%) Walnuts (15%) Single-cell protein (2.5%, 7.5%, or 5%) Dry skim milk (7.5%, 2.5%, or 5%) All bars (T0–T3) coated in milk chocolate | T1–T3 compared to T0: ↓ of 14–28% in moisture ↑ of 130–175% in protein ↑ of 300% in fat ↑ of 11–13.5% in energy | T1–T3 compared to T0: ↑ of 30% in Ca ↑ of 26% in Fe ↑ of 150–250% in P ↑ of 13–35% in Mg ↑ of 113–150% in B1 ↑ of 193–240% in B2 | T1–T3 compared to T0: No significant changes. T1–T3 after 6 months of storage compared to initial time: T1–T3 stored at 20–37 °C (average): ↓ of 7% in flavor, texture, and overall acceptability. T1–T3 stored at 5 °C (average): ↑ of 8% in texture and by 5% in overall acceptability (indicating quality maintenance). | [77] |
Ruzeiz | T0 (Control): Date paste (70 g) Almonds (11 g) Corn starch (19 g) T1–T3: Date paste (70 g) Almonds (11 g) Corn starch (7–11 g) Soy protein isolate (1.5–4.5 g) Dry skim milk (10.5–3.5 g) (T0–T4), half coated with milk chocolate, producing plain and chocolate bars | T1–T3 (plain, chocolate): ↓ of 10–15%, 5–10% in moisture ↑ of 27–83%, 16–38% in ash ↑ of 116–128%, 118–124% in protein ↑ of 6–16%, 36–42% in fat ↑ of 54–145%, 42–126% in fiber ↓ of 10–12%, 14–15% in NFE | T1–T3 (plain, chocolate) compared to T0: ↑ of 118–388%, 61–92% in Na ↑ of 10–56%, 1–26% in K ↑ of 57–138%, 33–92% in Ca ↑ of 48–95%, 44–68% in P ↑ of 12–29%, 4–17% in Mg ↓ of 32–2%, 26–4% in Fe | At initial (0 time): T1–T3 (average) compared to T0: ↓ of 1–4% in overall acceptability. Stored at 7 °C vs. 25 °C, 6 months: T1–T3 (average) compared to initial: ↓ of 9% vs. 7% in taste ↓ of 10% vs. 6% in texture ↓ of 9% vs. 8% in overall acceptability. T0 compared to initial: ↓ of 7% vs. 9% in taste ↓ of 7% vs. 16% in texture ↓ of 9% vs. 12% in overall acceptability. | [87] |
Ruzeiz | T0 (Control): Date paste (70%) Almond (11%), Corn starch (19%) T1–T4: Date paste (70%) Almond (11%) Toruway (9–12%) or Zyest (2–4%) Dry skim milk (6.5–11.5%) (T0–T4), half coated with milk chocolate, producing plain and chocolate bars | T1–T4 (plain, chocolate) compared to T0: ↓ of 17–13%, 9–3% in moisture ↑ of 67–128%, 50–72% in ash ↑ of 72–117%, 76–110% in protein ↑ of 26%, 10–20% in fat ↑ of 9–68%, 16–74% in fiber ↓ of 13–8%, 11–8% in carbohydrates ↓ of 3–1%, 1% in energy | T1–T4 (plain, chocolate) compared to T0: ↑ of 26–61%, 23–44% in K ↑ of 133–141%, 69–85% in Ca ↑ of 15–23%, 9–21% in Mg ↑ of 192–265%, 91–125% in P ↓ of 36–11%, 32–20% in Fe | At initial (0 time): T1–T4 (average) compared to T0: No significant changes in taste, texture, or overall acceptability. Stored at 7 °C vs. 25 °C, 6 months: T1–T4 (average) compared to initial: No significant changes T0 compared to initial time:
| [88] |
Bushibal, Gash-Gaafar, Lulu, or Shahla | T0 (control): Date paste (70 g) Peeled almonds (11 g) Rolled oat flakes (19 g) T1–T3: Date paste (70 g) Peeled almonds (11 g) Rolled oat flakes (7–11 g) Skim milk powder (6–12 g) Sesame seeds (0–6 g) | T1–T3 compared to T0: ↑ of 47–51% in ash ↑ of 17–36% in protein ↓ of 66–36% in fat | T1–T3 compared to T0: ↑ of 31–46% in P ↑ of 104–117% in Ca ↓ of 15–10% in K ↓ of 37–18% in Fe ↑ of 33–12% in Zn | Comparing between four date varieties:
| [90] |
Nabtat-Ali or Sukkari | Date pulp (500 g) Milk powder (100 g) Margarine (50 g) Citric acid (35.4 g) Pinch of table salt | Nabtat-Ali vs. Sukkari bars (%): Moisture (24.53 vs. 26.25) Ash (1.90 vs. 1.89) Protein (3.70 vs. 4.06) Fat (6.64 vs. 6.43) Fiber (5.51 vs. 4.6) Carbohydrates (57.72 vs. 56.77) | Nabtat-Ali vs. Sukkari bars compared to raw dates (%): ↓ of 27% vs. 17% in TPC ↓ of 39% vs. 29% in DPPH | Comparing the two varieties:
| [91] |
ND * | T0 (control): 100% date paste T1–T3: 80% date paste + (20% of either skim milk powder, soybean flour, or almond flour) | T1–T3 compared to T0:
| T1–T3 compared to T0: ↓ by 13–28% in vitamin C observed in bars containing almonds and skim milk, while bars containing soybean had ↑ of 8%. | T1–T3 (average) compared to T0:
| [79] |
Aseel | Date paste (100 g) Soy and chickpea flours (12.5 g each) Oat (12.5 g) Skim milk (5 g) | Protein (1.95%) Fiber (3.30%) Fat (4.91%) | (ppm): Mg (412.9), Fe (20.9), Zn (19.7), Cu (3.34) and Mn (2.5) | Based on a 9-point hedonic scale: The sample received high scores of 7.6–8.5 in color, mouthfeel, and overall acceptability. | [83] |
ND * | T0: Dates (100 g) Gram flour (5 g) Skim milk powder (5 g) Almonds and pistachios (5 g each) Cardamom and CMC (0.5 g each) T1–T3: T0 + Roasted oatmeal (15–35 g) | T2–T3 compared to T0: ↓ of 11–23% in moisture ↑ of 76–95% in ash ↑ of 25–47% in protein ↑ of 116–176% in fat ↑ of 63–94% in fiber ↑ of 11–18% in NFE ↓ of 6–9% in total sugars | T1–T3 compared to T0: ↓ of 74–75% in Fe ↑ of 62–162% in Mg ↑ of 52–75% in Zn ↑ of 142–193% in Mn | Based on a 9-point hedonic scale:
| [82] |
ND * | Date paste (100 g) Roasted corn and gram flours (0–15 g) Skim milk powder (20 g) Almonds and peanuts (15 g each) Cardamom and salt (0.5 g each) Butylated hydroxyanisole (0.002%) Sodium benzoate and potassium sorbate (0.01% each) | (%): Protein (5.03–7.24) Fat (3.79–4.96) Fiber (1.74–2.22) Moisture (16.66–18.93) Ash (1.26–1.72) NFE (84.59–88.18) | ND | Based on a 9-point hedonic scale: Higher scores of 6.76–7.09 in color, flavor, and taste were recorded for corn bars. | [84] |
ND * | T0 (control): Date (60 g) Date syrup and sesame seeds (20 g each) T1–T6: Date (30 g) Date syrup and sesame seeds (20 g each) Extruded wheat, necked barley, rice wheat (0–30 g each) Popcorn (0–30 g) | T1–T6 compared to T0: ↓ of 2–6% in moisture ↓ of 17–22% in ash ↑ of 16–33% in protein ↓ of 45–55% in fat ↓ of 1–85% in carbohydrates | T1–T6 compared to T0: ↓ of 4–15% in Ca ↓ of 3–8% in K ↑ of 3–29% in P ↓ of 12–27% in Mg ↓ of 9–24% in Fe ↑ of 8–35% in Zn | Based on a 9-point hedonic scale:
| [21] |
ND * | Date syrup: sesame paste (1:1, 2:1 and 1:2 ratios) Gelatin (7%)–TNLC (100–300 ppm) solution (25 g) | (g/100 g):
| ND | Comparing different ratios:
| [93] |
ND * | T1–T4: Date paste (100 g) Dried apricot paste (15–30 g) Skim milk powder (25 g) Roasted gram (chickpea) flour (12 g) Roasted peanuts (25 g) Sodium chloride (table salt) (0.5 g) | T1-T4 (with increased apricot concentrations): ↑ of 12% in moisture ↑ of 3% in ash ↑ of 7% in protein ↑ of 0.3% in fat ↑ of 8.5% in fiber | T1-T4 (with increased apricot concentrations): ↑ of 0.7% in K ↓ of 1.5% in Ca ↑ of 5.2% in Fe ↓ of 37% in Mn ↑ of 2.6% in Zn ↑ of 17% in TPC ↑ of 35% in free fatty acids | Comparing apricot concentrations:
| [94] |
Aseel | T1–T6: Dates (72–65 g) Dried apricots (8–17 g) Cheddar cheese (5–8 g) Whey protein isolate (12–13 g) | T1–T6 (%): Moisture (13.65–22.26) Protein (20.48–22.38) Fat (0.194–0.318) | ↑ in TPC (with higher cheese concentrations). ↑ in TFC (with higher dates and apricot concentrations). | T1 (higher date concentrations): Received highest scores in taste. Bars with higher concentrations of whey protein isolate: Received highest scores in texture. T5–T6 (higher cheese content): Disliked due to savory and salty taste. | [4] |
ND * | T1: Dates (64 g), dried apricots (16 g) Whey protein isolate (12 g) Cheddar cheese (8 g) T2–T3: T1 + roasted chickpea and rice flours (0–12.5 g) | T1–T3 (%): Moisture (22) Ash (2.12–2.44) Protein (23.2–236) Fiber (5.81–7.16) Fat (0.06–0.31) | ND |
| [78] |
ND * | Date paste (1000 g) Roasted cashew nuts (170 g) Roasted hazelnut (150 g) Freeze-dried cherries (50 g) Inulin powder (50 g) Dry coconut milk powder (35 g) Dry coconut flour (25 g) Cinnamon (10 g), salt (5 g) Unpurified sunflower protein concentrate and isolate (varying %) | (%): Protein (8.9–15.9) Fat (12.8–13.6) Fiber (10.5–12.1) | ND | Comparing sunflower protein concentrations:
| [80] |
Karblain | Date paste (100 g) Roasted gram and corn flours (20 g) Peanuts and almonds (10 g each) Whey protein concentrate (varying %) Vetch protein isolate (varying %) Table salt (0.5 g), cardamom (1 g) Butylated hydroxytoluene (0.002%) | (%): Moisture (15.56–18.70) Ash (2.30–2.91) Protein (7.41–14.96) Fat (5.55–8.37) Fiber (3.58–3.91) NFE (70.85–81.12) | ND | Comparing between protein concentrations:
| [95] |
Sukkari | T0 (control): Date paste (100%) T1–T4: Date paste (96–84%) Germinated flax seed powder (4–16%) | T1–T4 compared to T0: ↓ of 1–6% in moisture ↑ of 2–7% in ash ↑ of 49–151% in protein ↑ of 300–1300% in fat ↑ of 5–22% in fiber ↓ of 4–14% in carbohydrates | T1–T4 compared to T0: ↑ of 46–60% in Ca ↓ of 1–4% in K ↑ of 25–60% in Mg ↑ of 75–502% in Zn ↑ of 58–370% in Fe ↑ of 25–68% in Mn | Compared to T0: T1–T2 (4–8% of seeds): No significant difference was recorded. T3–T4 (12–16% of seeds): Mostly disliked in terms of appearance, taste, aroma, color, and overall acceptability. | [96] |
ND * | T0 (control): Date paste (60%) Roasted gram flour (30%) Nuts (10%) T1–T4: T0 + pomegranate or apple peel polyphenol extracts (2–3%, in replacement of date paste) | No changes observed | Compared to T0: T1–T2 (2–3% of apple peel extract): ↑ of 400–600% in TPC T3–T4 (2–3% of pomegranate peel extract): ↑ of 500–800% in TPC |
| [81] |
ND * | T0 (control): Date paste (55%) Roasted gram and corn flours (16% each) Peanuts and almonds (6% each) Salt (0.9%), potassium sorbate (0.1%) T1–T4: T0 + moringa leaf polyphenolic or tamarind seeds extracts (2–3%) | (%): Total sugars (45.40–53.10) | Compared to T0: ↑ of 944% in TPC recorded in bars containing 3% of moringa extract. ↑ of 212% in DPPH recorded in bars containing 2% tamarind extract. |
| [99] |
ND * | T0: Date paste (100 g) Roasted corn flour (5 g) Cardamom (0.5 g) and salt T1–T3: T0 + soy protein isolates (16.44 g) or date pit powder (10.35 g) or both | T1–T3: ↓ of 12–34% in moisture ↑ of 1–5% in ash ↑ of 8–306% in protein ↑ of 21–52% in fat ↑ of 98–122% in fiber noted in date pit powder bars only, with ↓ of 11% in soy bars | Compared to T0: ↑ of 33–65% in antioxidant activity recorded for bars containing the highest date pit concentrations. |
| [100] |
4. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Barakat, H.; Alfheeaid, H.A. Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera) and Its Promising Potential in Developing Functional Energy Bars: Review of Chemical, Nutritional, Functional, and Sensory Attributes. Nutrients 2023, 15, 2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15092134
Barakat H, Alfheeaid HA. Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera) and Its Promising Potential in Developing Functional Energy Bars: Review of Chemical, Nutritional, Functional, and Sensory Attributes. Nutrients. 2023; 15(9):2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15092134
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarakat, Hassan, and Hani A. Alfheeaid. 2023. "Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera) and Its Promising Potential in Developing Functional Energy Bars: Review of Chemical, Nutritional, Functional, and Sensory Attributes" Nutrients 15, no. 9: 2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15092134
APA StyleBarakat, H., & Alfheeaid, H. A. (2023). Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera) and Its Promising Potential in Developing Functional Energy Bars: Review of Chemical, Nutritional, Functional, and Sensory Attributes. Nutrients, 15(9), 2134. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15092134