Journal of Food Process Engineering, cilt.49, sa.1, 2026 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
Fruit bars are snack products obtained by mushing fruit, adding sugar, pectin, and other ingredients, and drying the resulting mixture. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of spent coffee grounds (SCGs), a valuable waste product of the coffee industry, on the physicochemical and bioactive properties of a snack fruit bar enriched with bioactive properties after mushing apricot fruit. Results showed that apricot bars containing 2.5%, 5%, and 7.5% SCGs had higher phenolic, flavonoid, antioxidant activity (ABTS and DPPH), ascorbic acid, and total carotenoid contents compared to the control group. Especially, the fruit bar containing 7.5% SCG stood out in terms of tested bioactive properties. Therefore, it has been determined that the antioxidant and phenolic compounds found in SCGs are also reflected in fruit bars. Furthermore, α-amylase and lipase inhibition values were increased in the enriched fruit bars, and the potential of the developed fruit bars to exhibit antidiabetic and antiobesity properties was improved. Furthermore, the intestinal phase phenolic compound bioaccessibility values of the enriched fruit bars (87.40%–133.3%) were higher than the SCG-free control fruit bar (91.7%). The potential for creating an alternative product with improved nutritional and economic benefits by adding a waste product rich in bioactive compounds such as SCGs to the fruit bar formulation was evaluated. Such products could be considered a new alternative to a functional snack product group rich in bioactive substances that could be incorporated into today's diet.