Dried Apricots

DRIED APRICOTS
      Kuraga is one of two types of dried apricots, namely dried apricots with the pits removed beforehand. The second type of dried apricots is uruk – apricots (usually small-fruited sweet varieties) dried with the pits, most often simply on the tree in the sun (after drying, they are shaken off).
      To obtain kuraga, apricot fruits (very often unripe) are cut lengthwise, the pits are removed, and then they are dried. For drying, special ovens are usually used, in which apricots are subjected to sulfurization – treatment with sulfur dioxide. Sulfurization is used to prevent spoilage, facilitate the drying process, and improve the quality of the raw material (prevents darkening of the raw material during drying). To do this, the apricots are placed in a fumigation room, where burning sulfur generates gaseous sulfur dioxide. Apricots are exposed to sulfur dioxide for about 8-12 hours. In addition, in some cases, apricots are also treated with solutions of water-soluble sulfite salts, such as potassium metabisulfite and sodium metabisulfite.

     Sulfur dioxide, sodium sulfite, sodium bisulfite, potassium bisulfite, sodium metabisulfite, and potassium metabisulfite are recognized in many countries (including Ukraine and Russia) as safe additives for use in food and medicinal products. Sulfur dioxide is a permitted food additive E220 (for more details, see Dried fruits). The maximum permissible content of sulfur dioxide in apricots is 2 mg per 1 g (0.2%). According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the safe daily intake of sulfur dioxide in food for humans is 0.7 mg/kg of body weight.

The literature contains data that dried apricots produced in Turkey contain more than 0.3% sulfur dioxide. This is because Turkish dried apricots are harvested unripe and practically ripen during sulfur dioxide treatment, after 20 hours of exposure. Therefore, Turkish dried apricots have the same orange color and bitter taste. The technology for processing dried apricots in post-Soviet countries differs in that ripe apricots are used, which are fumigated with sulfur dioxide for 10 hours, so the content of the E220 additive in dried apricots from post-Soviet countries is significantly lower and is about 0.1% (1 mg per 1 g), and they also taste sweeter.

     In some cases, dried apricots treated with sulfur dioxide can have negative health effects, including asthma attacks (symptoms of sulfur dioxide poisoning include a runny nose, cough, hoarseness, and a sore throat; at high concentrations – suffocation, speech disorder, difficulty swallowing, vomiting, and possible acute pulmonary edema).

Therefore, to protect your health, try to buy dried apricots and apricots that have been dried naturally in the sun and have not been sulfurized.

Unfortunately, there is very little data on the nutritional content of apricots, so we only provide data for dried apricots.

      Dried apricots are high in beta-carotene (58.2% of the daily requirement per 100 g), alpha-tocopherol (26.6%), nicotinic acid (14.3%), and pantothenic acid (14.0%).
     The mineral content in dried apricots is 3-5 times higher than in apricots. The mineral composition is dominated by boron (385.7%), chromium (159.0%), silicon (146.7%), vanadium (110.3%), cobalt (84.0%), nickel (80.0%), strontium (70.0%), potassium (42.9%), iron (28.9%), copper (27.0%), zirconium (22.4%), molybdenum (17.4%), rubidium (13.1%), manganese (11.4%), lithium (10.9%), and magnesium (10.4%).
     Dried apricots are rich in phytosterols (61.8%), predominantly beta-sitosterol (77.5%); carbohydrates (16.2%), especially mono- and disaccharides (96.0%), among which glucose (330.8% of the daily norm per 100 g) and fructose (35.6%) predominate; fiber (29.2%) and pectin (34.0%); it contains small amounts of starch (up to 0.4 g per 100 g) and significant amounts of sucrose (7.89 g per 100 g).
    The content of total purine bases in 100 g is 25.0% of the daily norm.
     It should be noted that dried apricots can concentrate the toxic trace element strontium, containing 70.0% of the maximum daily requirement per 100 g.
Calories per 100 g: 241 kcal
Water per 100 g: 23.8-29.1 g
Ash per 100 g: 1.7-3.5 g

CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
 
Vitamins, macro- and microelements, nutrients per 100 g
VITAMINS
Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily requirement
in numbers visually
Vitamin B1 (thiamine) 0.015 0.9 0
Vitamin B2 (riboflavin) 0.058-0.065 mg 3.1 5
Vitamin B5 (pantothenic acid) 0.7 14 20
Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) 0.17 8.5 10
Vitamin B9 (folic acid) 14.0 3.5 5
Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) 0.0 0 0
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) 1.0 1.4 0
Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) 3.04-4.95 mg 26.6 30
Beta-tocopherol 0.1 0.7 0
Gamma-tocopherol 0.1 0.7 0
Delta-tocopherol 0 0 0
Vitamin D (ergocalciferol) 0.0 0 0
Vitamin PP (nicotinic acid) 2.5-3.2 mg 14.3 20
Vitamin K (phylloquinone) 3.1 2.6 5
Biotin 1.0 2 5
Beta-carotene 1270.0-4540.0 mcg 58.2 60
Lutein + zeaxanthin 52.0-82.0 1.1 0
Lycopene 200.0 4 5
Choline 13.9 2.8 5
Methylmethionine sulfonium (vitamin U) 0 0  0
Betaine 0 0.0 0

* Full jug – 100% of the daily requirement; empty – 0-1% of the daily requirement.

MINERAL ELEMENTS

Macroelements

Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily requirement
in numbers Visually
Potassium 983.0-1162.0 mg 42.9 40
Calcium 38.3-89.6 mg 5.8 5
Silicon 44.0 mg 146.7 10050
Magnesium 35.0-48.2 mg 10.4 10
Sodium 19.8-23.0 mg 1.6 0
Sulfur 50 5 5
Phosphorus 54.2-77.4 mg 8.2 10
Chlorine 3.0 0.1 0

Trace elements

Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily requirement
in numbers Visually
Aluminum 860.0 2.3 5
Boron 270.0 385.7 10010010090
Vanadium 44.1 110.3 10010
Iron 2.66-6.0 mg 28.9 30
Iodine 3.4 2.3 5
Cobalt 8.4 84 80
Lithium 10.9 10.9 10
Manganese 173.0-282.0 μg 11.4 10
Copper 270.0 27 30
Molybdenum 12.2 17.4 20
Nickel 110.0-130.0 80 80
Rubidium 13.1 13.1 10
Lead 0.45 4.5 5
Selenium 2.2 3.4 5
Strontium 500.0–620.0 μg 70 70
Thallium 0.1 5.0 5
Fluorine 53.2 1.3 0
Chromium 59.0-100.0 μg 159.0 10060
Zinc 200.0-390.0 μg 2.5 5
Zirconium 11.2 22.4 20

 

PROTEINS AND AMINO ACIDS

 

Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily value
in numbers visually
Total protein content 2.6-3.5 g 3.8 5
Essential amino acid content 0.740-1.470 g 5.1 5
Content of replaceable amino acids 1.359-3.380 g 4.2 5

 

Essential amino acids

 

Name of acid Content, g per 100 g of product % of daily requirement
in numbers Visually
Valine 0.12 6.0 5
Histidine 0.044-0.080 3 5
Isoleucine 0.079-0.150 5.7 5
Leucine 0.140-0.290 4.7 5
Lysine 0.120-0.340 5.6 5
Methionine 0.019-0.020 1.1 0
Threonine 0.065-0.180 5.1 5
Tryptophan 0.014-0.090 5.2 5
Phenylalanine 0.079-0.200 4.7 5

 

Non-essential amino acids

 

Acid name Content, g per 100 g of product % of daily requirement
in numbers Visually
Alanine 0.1 2.6 5
Arginine 0.060-0.190 2 5
Aspartic acid 0.580-1.120 7 10
Glycine 0.070-0.150 3.1 5
Glutamic acid 0.120-0.500 2.3 5
Proline 0.290-0.770 11.8 10
Serine 0.093-0.280 2.2 5
Tyrosine 0.036-0.110 2.4 5
Cystine 0.010-0.020 0.8 0



FATS AND FATTY ACIDS

 

Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily allowance
in numbers Visually
Total fat content 0.51-0.62 g 0.6 0
Unsaturated fatty acid content 1.22-1.48 g 3.3 5
Omega-3 unsaturated fatty acid content 0 0 0
Omega-6 unsaturated fatty acid content 0.61-0.74 g 6.8 5
Saturated fatty acid content 0.14-0.17 g 0.6 0

 

Unsaturated fatty acids

 

Acid name Content, g per 100 g of product
Palmitoleic C 16:1 (omega-7) 0
Oleic C 18:1 (omega-9) 0.610-0.740 g
Linoleic C 18:2 (omega-6) 0.610-0.740 g
Linolenic C 18:3 (omega-3) 0
Stearidonic C 18:4 (omega-3) 0
Gadoleic C 20:1 (omega-11) 0
Arachidic C 20:4 (omega-6) 0
Eicosapentaenoic C 20:5 (omega-3) 0
Erucic acid C 22:1 (omega-9) 0
Clupanoid C 22:5 (omega-3) 0
Docosahexaenoic C 22:6 (omega-3) 0
Nervonova C 24:1 (omega-9) 0

 

Saturated fatty acids

 

Acid name Content, g per 100 g of product
Myristic C 14:0 0
Palmitic C 16:0 0.140-0.170 g
Stearic C 18:0 0
Arachidic C 20:0 0
Behenic C 22:0 0
Lignoceric acid C 24:0 0

 

Sterols

 

Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily allowance
in numbers Visually
Total phytosterols 34.0 mg 61.8 60
Campesterol 1.0 mg 1.8 0
Beta-sitosterol 31.0 mg 77.5 80
Stigmasterol 1.0 2.9 5
Cholesterol 0.0 0

 

CARBOHYDRATES

 

Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily allowance
in numbers Visually
Total carbohydrate content 51.0-62.64 g 16.2 20
Mono- and disaccharides 48.0 96.0 100
Glucose 33.08 g 330.8 10010010030
Fructose 12.47 35.6 40
Galactose 0 0 0
Sucrose 7.89
Lactose 0 0 0
Starch 0.35-0.40 g  –
Maltose 0
Fiber 7.3 29.2 30
Pectin 1.3-2.1 g 34 40
PURINE BASES
Name Content, mass fraction per 100 g of product % of daily requirement
in numbers Visually
Purine content 32.0 mg 25.0 30

 

Units of measurement:
Piece: 8.1-10.2 g
Teaspoon: 250.0 g
Granulated glass: 200.0 g
Teaspoon: 7.0 g
Tablespoon: 20.0 g

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