Odor-Active Compound Stability in Mango Peel Side-Streams: Insights for Valorization and Waste Minimization
Journal article, 2026

Comprehensive characterization of the mango peel volatilome is essential to revealing its aromatic potential and enabling its revalorization as a natural flavoring. The volatile profile of Mangifera indica L. var. Osteen peels at three ripening stages (green, ripe, overripe) was analyzed before and after thermal drying (45 °C, 18 h): an unavoidable stabilization step for valorization applications. HS–SPME/GC–MS enabled the identification of 76 volatile compounds across different key aroma-contributing families: monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, esters, furanics and norisoprenoids. The ripening stage significantly influenced the qualitative and quantitative volatilome in fresh samples but drying heavily reduced those differences. Multivariate analyses confirmed that the drying process is the dominant factor shaping the stabilized peels’ volatilome. These findings underscore the industrial relevance of this side-stream: regardless of ripening stage, mango peels can be uniformly stabilized to be upcycled into aroma-rich ingredients. It simplifies raw material sourcing and supports food waste revalorization strategies in flavor and fragrance developments.

volatile compounds

revalorization

odor-active compounds

ripening

mango side-streams

maturity

thermal processing

Author

Rodrigo Oliver Simancas

University of Castilla, La Mancha

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

María Consuelo Díaz-Maroto

University of Castilla, La Mancha

Álvaro Fernández-Ochoa

Universidad de Granada

María Soledad Pérez-Coello

University of Castilla, La Mancha

María Elena Alañón

University of Castilla, La Mancha

Foods

23048158 (eISSN)

Vol. 15 2 215

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Food Science

Organic Chemistry

DOI

10.3390/foods15020215

PubMed

41596814

More information

Latest update

2/5/2026 2