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Blanching of Two Commercial Norwegian Brown Algae for Reduction of Iodine and Other Compounds of Importance for Food Safety and Quality

Abstract

Two commercially utilized kelp species, winged kelp (Alaria esculenta) and sugar kelp (Saccharina latissima), can accumulate high amounts of iodine and thereby pose a health concern if consumed in excess. Water blanching is used industrially to reduce the iodine content. This study aimed to optimize the blanching conditions to reduce the energy consumption and environmental impact by investigating the parameters of temperature, duration, use of sea or fresh water, biomass-to-water ratio, and recycling of water. The study investigated the impact of the blanching conditions on composition of the biomass, including nutrient content and potential toxic elements. The iodine content was reduced to 5% of the initial content for S. latissima and to 8% for A. esculenta at the optimal conditions in the present study, which was blanching in seawater at 80 °C for 2 min. Using tap water at the same conditions resulted in a reduction to 7 and 11% of the initial content. The content of arsenic in blanched winged kelp was reduced to levels below the maximum allowed content in feed, whereas the content in blanched sugar kelp remained above this level. This study provides a comprehensive set of data on blanching of the two kelp species, with high relevance for the industrial scale-up of kelp processing.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Biotechnology and Nanomedicine
  • Technical University of Denmark
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Date

01.12.2025

Year

2025

Published in

Foods

Volume

14

Issue

23

Page(s)

4113 - 4113

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository