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Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets

SIMPLE SUMMARY: More than 10 million tons of coffee are consumed annually in the world, generating two kg of wet spent coffee grounds per kg of coffee consumed, which are considered food waste. Despite the interesting nutritional value of spent coffee grounds for ruminant feeds, their fibre fraction...

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Autores principales: San Martin, David, Ibarruri, Jone, Luengo, Nagore, Ferrer, Jorge, García-Rodríguez, Aser, Goiri, Idoia, Atxaerandio, Raquel, Medjadbi, Mounir, Zufía, Jaime, Sáez de Cámara, Estíbaliz, Iñarra, Bruno
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10177294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37174514
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13091477
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author San Martin, David
Ibarruri, Jone
Luengo, Nagore
Ferrer, Jorge
García-Rodríguez, Aser
Goiri, Idoia
Atxaerandio, Raquel
Medjadbi, Mounir
Zufía, Jaime
Sáez de Cámara, Estíbaliz
Iñarra, Bruno
author_facet San Martin, David
Ibarruri, Jone
Luengo, Nagore
Ferrer, Jorge
García-Rodríguez, Aser
Goiri, Idoia
Atxaerandio, Raquel
Medjadbi, Mounir
Zufía, Jaime
Sáez de Cámara, Estíbaliz
Iñarra, Bruno
author_sort San Martin, David
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: More than 10 million tons of coffee are consumed annually in the world, generating two kg of wet spent coffee grounds per kg of coffee consumed, which are considered food waste. Despite the interesting nutritional value of spent coffee grounds for ruminant feeds, their fibre fraction is very high, which presents a limitation for including this alternative ingredient in animals’ diets due to its low digestibility. This study considered thermal and mechanical treatments combined with enzymatic hydrolysis to improve the spent coffee grounds’ nutritive value and digestibility. The main conclusions are that the effect of enzymatic treatments is overwhelmed by the action of ruminal bacteria and that diminution of the particle size is the best strategy to improve the spent coffee grounds’ digestibility. ABSTRACT: Lignin in animal diets is a limiting factor due to its low digestibility. This study assessed the effects of thermal or mechanical pre-treatments and enzymatic hydrolysis on spent coffee grounds’ (SCG) nutritional value and digestibility. A first trial studied the effect of thermal pre-treatment and hydrolysis with removal of the liquid part and a second trial studied mechanical pre-treatment and hydrolysis with and without removal of the liquid part. Autoclaving did not improve the enzymatic performance nor the nutritional value. Hydrolysis reduced the digestibility of the solid phase and impaired its ruminal fermentation efficiency. Hydrolysates without removing the liquid part improved its nutritional value, but not compared with unprocessed SCG. Grinding increased crude protein and reduced crude fibre and protein, which led to greater fermentation and in vitro digestibility. Thus, grinding emerges as the most promising valorisation strategy to improve SCG nutritional characteristics and their use for animal feed, contributing to the circular economy.
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spelling pubmed-101772942023-05-13 Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets San Martin, David Ibarruri, Jone Luengo, Nagore Ferrer, Jorge García-Rodríguez, Aser Goiri, Idoia Atxaerandio, Raquel Medjadbi, Mounir Zufía, Jaime Sáez de Cámara, Estíbaliz Iñarra, Bruno Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: More than 10 million tons of coffee are consumed annually in the world, generating two kg of wet spent coffee grounds per kg of coffee consumed, which are considered food waste. Despite the interesting nutritional value of spent coffee grounds for ruminant feeds, their fibre fraction is very high, which presents a limitation for including this alternative ingredient in animals’ diets due to its low digestibility. This study considered thermal and mechanical treatments combined with enzymatic hydrolysis to improve the spent coffee grounds’ nutritive value and digestibility. The main conclusions are that the effect of enzymatic treatments is overwhelmed by the action of ruminal bacteria and that diminution of the particle size is the best strategy to improve the spent coffee grounds’ digestibility. ABSTRACT: Lignin in animal diets is a limiting factor due to its low digestibility. This study assessed the effects of thermal or mechanical pre-treatments and enzymatic hydrolysis on spent coffee grounds’ (SCG) nutritional value and digestibility. A first trial studied the effect of thermal pre-treatment and hydrolysis with removal of the liquid part and a second trial studied mechanical pre-treatment and hydrolysis with and without removal of the liquid part. Autoclaving did not improve the enzymatic performance nor the nutritional value. Hydrolysis reduced the digestibility of the solid phase and impaired its ruminal fermentation efficiency. Hydrolysates without removing the liquid part improved its nutritional value, but not compared with unprocessed SCG. Grinding increased crude protein and reduced crude fibre and protein, which led to greater fermentation and in vitro digestibility. Thus, grinding emerges as the most promising valorisation strategy to improve SCG nutritional characteristics and their use for animal feed, contributing to the circular economy. MDPI 2023-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10177294/ /pubmed/37174514 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13091477 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
San Martin, David
Ibarruri, Jone
Luengo, Nagore
Ferrer, Jorge
García-Rodríguez, Aser
Goiri, Idoia
Atxaerandio, Raquel
Medjadbi, Mounir
Zufía, Jaime
Sáez de Cámara, Estíbaliz
Iñarra, Bruno
Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets
title Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets
title_full Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets
title_fullStr Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets
title_short Evaluation of Valorisation Strategies to Improve Spent Coffee Grounds’ Nutritional Value as an Ingredient for Ruminants’ Diets
title_sort evaluation of valorisation strategies to improve spent coffee grounds’ nutritional value as an ingredient for ruminants’ diets
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10177294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37174514
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13091477
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