Open Access Article
This Open Access Article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 3.0 Unported Licence

Current insights into date by-product valorization for sustainable food industries and technology

Athira Jayasree Subhash a, Gafar Babatunde Bamigbade a and Mutamed Ayyash *ab
aDepartment of Food Science, College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, United Arab Emirates University (UAEU), Al-Ain, UAE. E-mail: mutamed.ayyash@uaeu.ac.ae
bZayed Center for Health Sciences, United Arab Emirates University (UAEU), Al-Ain, UAE

Received 27th November 2023 , Accepted 8th January 2024

First published on 9th January 2024


Abstract

The date palm holds immense significance in the socio-economic fabric of the countries where it is extensively cultivated. The plant and its derivatives boast diverse nutritional and functional properties, contributing to a substantial global production surge. Despite various initiatives to convert date processing waste into value-added products, a significant proportion of waste persists in the form of date seeds, date pomace, and lost dates. The physicochemical and nutritional profiling of date seeds and pomace reveals functionalities that, if properly utilized, could transform them into economically viable, natural, and sustainable ingredients across various sectors. Although ample literature exists on date palms and their industrially relevant waste products, this review distinctly focuses on date seed and pomace as pivotal by-products of date processing. The objective is to furnish comprehensive and updated insights into the valorization of date seeds and pomace, emphasizing their applications in the food industry. This review also endeavors to illuminate approaches for minimizing the wastage of these industrial by-products and highlights the bioactive components inherent in them.



Sustainability spotlight

The manuscript provides a comprehensive exploration of sustainable practices in the food industry by focusing on the valorization of date by-products, specifically seeds and pomace. By addressing the physicochemical and nutritional profiling of these by-products, the review sheds light on their potential as economically viable, natural, and eco-friendly ingredients. The manuscript emphasizes strategies for minimizing waste, promoting sustainable utilization, and highlights bioactive components with potential health benefits. Through this work, we contribute valuable insights into sustainable technologies for food ingredients, processes, and packaging.

1. Introduction

Fruits have gained prominence in dietary choices due to their rich biocomponents, including carbohydrates, minerals, vitamins, and fibers. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends daily fruit intake for their bioactive, nutraceutical, and health benefits,1,2 promoting overall health and well-being. A wealth of evidence links fruit and vegetable consumption to a reduced mortality rate from various diseases, including tumors.3 This success is attributed to the inherent bioactive compounds, dietary fiber, and antioxidants present in fruits and vegetables.1,4 In the Middle East and North Africa region (MENA), date fruits derived from the common date palm tree stand out as one of the most common functional and nutrient-packed fruits. Scientific evaluations have identified biomacromolecules in date fruits that contribute to human health, addressing infectious and degenerative diseases such as cancer, gastric disorders, and hypercholesterolemia.5

The date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.), a dioecious monocotyledonous tree belonging to the family Arecaceae and the subfamily Coryphoideae, encompasses approximately 200 genera and over 2500 species.6 Cultivated since ancient times, date palms have played pivotal roles in medicine, socioeconomics, ornamentation, environmental sustainability, and nutrition.7–9 Although historical records provide limited information on the origin of date palms, ancient Mesopotamia (now Southern Iraq) and the Nile Valley in Egypt are recognized as their sources. Domestication occurred from the Neolithic period through the Bronze Age, as evidenced by carbonized seed materials.10–13 Date palms originated in the Near East region in Mesopotamia around 4000 BC before becoming integral to the social and economic lives of arid and semi-arid regions, thriving in hot climates with minimal rainfall and low humidity.14 Geographically, Arabian countries and Iran are global leaders in date palm cultivation, accounting for about 70% of the global production.15–18 However, date palms have also spread to tropical, subtropical, temperate, and arid regions globally, including South America, South Africa, Southern Spain, West Asia, the Mediterranean coast of Africa, Pakistan, Mexico, Australia, India, and parts of the United States (California, Texas, and Arizona).6,19 With over 2000 global cultivars named according to their originating country,19,20 date palms offer more than just fruits. They provide ligneous midribs, stalks, and fibers from leaves and fronds used in manufacturing building materials, fuel, basketry, and packaging materials.21,22

Fig. 1 illustrates some of the global importance of cultivating date palms. Beyond the cultural and spiritual significance, especially in MENA, central and South Iraq, Upper Egypt, and Northern Sudan, date cultivation profoundly influences the economies of producing countries. The MENA region, characterized by hot and dry climates, remains a major producer, accounting for 67% of total date exports and 75% of global date production, with India being the top consumer of date fruits.5,23–26 In 2020, global date palm cultivation covered about 1.3 million hectares, producing approximately 9.5 million tons of date fruits.25 Asia reported the largest cultivated area at 62.43%, followed by Africa at 36.72%, while America and Europe each accounted for less than 1%. FAO statistics identified Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Algeria, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, and Sudan as the top seven date-producing countries.25 Recent trends indicate a steady increase in date palm production, attributed to documented nutritional and health values, along with innovations in cultivation and processing, leading to the introduction of new date-derived products.10 The global date fruit market is expected to witness significant growth between 2022 and 2030, driven by strategic initiatives by key producers.25


image file: d3fb00224a-f1.tif
Fig. 1 Importance of global date cultivation.

Date fruits are the cornerstone of date palm products from an economic perspective, being consumed as fresh or dried whole fruits or processed into various food products, such as jams, syrups, sugars, jellies, juice, and pastes.7,24,27 Physiologically, the date fruit is a one-seeded drupe enclosed in a fleshy pulp of pericarp, mesocarp, and endocarp,24 holding pivotal significance, particularly in MENA regions.1,28,29 In many Arabian and Islamic countries, date fruits serve as traditional snacks during hospitality events, often accompanied by dairy products and coffee, especially in Gulf countries.20 Moreover, the social and economic value of oasis residents in MENA countries is intertwined with date palms and fruits owing to their inherent nutritional, medicinal, environmental, and structural applications.20 Despite the global variety in date cultivars, characterized by differences in size, color, taste, and ripeness degree, they all undergo a maturation cycle encompassing five stages over seven months, with each stage named according to the originating country.15,30 The quality and nutritive value of date fruits are influenced by external and internal changes during maturation.31 The edibility of date fruits spans the last three stages due to reduced bitterness, increased sweetness, improved tenderness, and juiciness.10,24,32 It is noteworthy to reiterate that the chemical and functional contents of dates are affected by the different stages of growth (Table 1) evinced by the simultaneous reduction in fibers, vitamins, and minerals as sugar levels increase, resulting in a total decrease in weight.33,34 Additionally, phenolics and flavonoids have been reported to decrease as dates age, especially in Ajwa dates.35

Table 1 Characteristics of date fruits at developmental stages
S/N Stage name Maturity Growth period (weeks) Color Texture Taste Moisture content (%) Sugar content (%) Edibility Reference
1 Hababouk Young immature 4–5 White Fluffy 80–90 No Fernández-López et al. (2022),10 Hussain et al. (2020)32
2 Kimri Immature 9–14 Green Turgid Bitter 75–85 20 No Krueger (2021),229 Martín-Sánchez et al. (2014)34
3 Khalal Mature 6 Yellow, pink, red, purple Turgid Slightly bitter 40–60 50 Yes Golshan and Fooladi (2006),230 Martín-Sánchez et al. (2014)34
4 Rutab Mature 2–4 Yellow, brown, black Soft Sweet 30 72–88 Yes Baliga et al. (2011),15 Krueger (2021)229
5 Tamar (ripe and dried) Mature Black or brown Hard Sweet 20–25 72–88 Yes Al Udhaib (2015),231 Krueger (2021)229


Dates not only serve as a cost-effective staple food source, contributing to food security in agrarian societies, but are also considered excellent sources of energy for growing populations.36 Consumption of dates contributes to overall health due to their richness in bio-nutrients, such as dietary fibers, proteins, carbohydrates, low fat, and minerals, with carbohydrates being the most abundant, averaging an estimated 50–89 g of total sugars per 100 g of date fruits.10,32,37 Furthermore, vitamins, such as thiamine, cobalamin, riboflavin, retinol, pyridoxine, and ascorbic acid, along with carotene, flavonoids, and anthocyanins that influence date color, have been identified in date fruits.1,6,19 The presence of bioactive compounds like antioxidants, phenols, sterols, anthocyanins, and carotenoids, enhances the functional and health properties of dates, making them beneficial for treating cardiovascular and stomach disorders.10,30,38–40 It is crucial to note that the composition and quantity of these micro and macro nutrients vary according to the cultivar, growth region, ripening stage, and climatic conditions.32,37,41

The date palm tree has garnered significant attention owing to its desirable fruits and high nutritional benefits.42 Traditionally, all parts of the date palm tree have found applications in medicine and food, playing a unique role in the diets of residents in date-producing countries. Date palm fruits have been utilized in traditional medicine as syrups for treating liver diseases and for pregnant women just before delivery. Consuming dates regularly is believed to protect individuals from chronic, infectious, and gastrointestinal diseases.43 Date fruits and associated products, such as date syrups, serve as raw materials for beverages, confectioneries, ice creams, and bakery products.44

The production of dates generates approximately 30% waste during harvesting from immature stages within the cluster. Second-class dates are also generated during picking, storing, or conditioning. Furthermore, the processing of date fruits into secondary products, such as confectionary dates, date paste, date fruit powder, vinegar, jam, chutney, date syrup, sugar, juice, and syrups, results in the generation of tons of waste in the form of fibrous date pomace (dibs) and seeds,45,46 along with by-products like date seed flour hydrolysate (DSFH), date seed flour (DSF), defatted date seed, fermented date fruit puree, and date seed oil.1 These by-products have industrial functional applications in food. Intriguingly, there is scientific evidence supporting the nutritional and bioactive properties of date fruits and their by-products, demonstrating antioxidant, antimutagenic, anti-inflammatory, anticancer, antimicrobial, and immunostimulant properties.42 The global acceptance of date fruit, coupled with the aforementioned activities, contributes to the substantial amount of waste generated from date production and processing. It has become essential for farmers and processors to enhance the valorization of these by-products into value-added products, leveraging their inherent nutritional and medicinal benefits while promoting a circular economy and sustainability. Despite the global acceptance of date consumption, the exploration of the food and medicinal applications of dates and their by-products has not been fully investigated. Hence, the aim of this present review is to elucidate recent information about the history and market value, as well as to explore and generate comprehensive current scientific reports on different biocomponents, phytonutrients, and phytochemicals present in date by-products, specifically the date seeds and pomace. The novelty of this review is further strengthened by illuminating and accentuating the applications of these by-products in food industries as potential food additives, nutraceuticals, or raw materials for functional foods against increasing health and food insecurities.

2. By-products of date-fruit processing

Date palm holds significant socio-economic importance in countries where it is extensively cultivated, and the diverse nutritional and functional properties of the plant have led to a global increase in its production.19,47 The date palm fruit, characterized by its cylindrical or oval shape, consists of a fleshy, thick outer layer surrounding an elongated seed with a groove on one side. The color transitions of the fruit range from yellow to reddish-brown as it matures. Renowned for their sweet taste, date fruits are highly nutritious and contain sugars, proteins, and other essential components.32,48,49

As one of the richest natural plant protein sources, date fruits have versatile applications in various food processes, serving as solubilizing, gelling, stabilizing, emulsifying, and foaming agents.48 Notably, almost every part of the date fruit is utilizable. Harvested dates are consumed directly in their natural stages, such as Khalal, Rutab, or Tamer.19 Additionally, low-grade or excess dates undergo direct processing or value addition for consumption, manifesting as date syrup, date juice, date extract, date powder, date paste, date fiber concentrate, date jam, vinegar, and some components that serve as animal feed.50 Despite numerous efforts to convert industrially relevant date processing waste into value-added products, a substantial amount of waste is generated in the form of date seeds, date pomace, and discarded dates.51Fig. 2 illustrates the by-products produced by the date processing industry.


image file: d3fb00224a-f2.tif
Fig. 2 Major processing by-products of date industries.

2.1 Date seeds

Date seeds are characterized by a thick endosperm and a small embryo.52 These seeds, also referred to as pits, kernels, or stones, constitute by-products of date processing and packaging, accounting for approximately 10–15% of the total weight of date fruits.47 The seed is composed of a small embryo and a hard endosperm, exhibiting an oblong and grooved ventral structure.53 In their raw form, date seeds possess a characteristic brown color and a bitter taste, and are generally odorless.54 Upon roasting and milling, they develop an aroma reminiscent of roasted coffee, with the former process improving their chemical profile.55

Studies focusing on the nutritional profiling of date seeds have undertaken comparative analyses of different seed varieties, maturity stages, and geographical locations.56–58 Unfortunately, large quantities of date seeds are discarded by date industries, contributing to post-harvest waste annually.59 Notably, date seeds exhibit the potential to remain dormant for extended periods and can grow under favorable circumstances.60 Owing to their bioactive compounds and dietary fibers, date seeds emerge as suitable candidates as raw materials for fiber-based foods. They are rich in phytochemicals, such as phenolic acids, carotenoids, flavonoids, anthocyanins, and lignin.61–63

Date pits, whether in whole or roasted form, are well-known sources of various classes of phenolic compounds. A study by Ardekani et al. (2010)64 highlighted that date seeds exhibited an overall antioxidant activity of 37 mmol ferric per 100 g sample and an overall phenolic content of 3658 mg gallic acid equivalents per 100 g sample. Habib et al. (2014)65 reported the presence of families of phenolic compounds like phenolic acids, flavan-3-ols, flavones, flavonols, and hydroxycinnamic acids, in the UPLC chromatogram of date seeds. The concentration per 100 g of ellagic acid, benzoic acid, cinnamic acid, and pyrogallol, as identified in date seeds, ranges from 36% to 58%.53

Roasted date pits have demonstrated a maximum inhibiting effect against colon cancer cell lines possibly due to their phenolic profiling and antioxidant potential. Various studies have reported the role of dietary flavonoids in suppressing tumor cell proliferation.66–68 This suppression is achieved by (i) modulating reactive oxygen species (ROS) to scavenge enzyme activities; (ii) arresting the cell cycle; and (iii) inducing apoptosis, thereby suppressing cancer cell proliferation. A study by Akasha et al. (2016)48 identified storage proteins glycinin and b-conglycinin as the prominent date seed proteins out of the 300 proteins detected. The protein found in date seeds contains a higher concentration of sulfur-containing amino acids, such as methionine and cystine and negligible concentrations of tryptophan. This concentration and type of amino acid vary with different date cultivars and processing methods. For example, in roasted date seeds, the highest reported amino acids were glutamic acid, arginine, aspartic acid, and leucine, corresponding to 16.44, 8.13, 7.63, and 6.10 g/100 g proteins, respectively.69

Date pits were traditionally discarded during processing until recent times when their potential functionalities were explored. Powdered seeds have been used as caffeine-free coffee ingredients in the Arab world for decades. In recent times, date seeds have found applications in animal feed, enhancing animal growth by boosting hormone levels.70 Extensive studies are ongoing on the utilization of date seed by-products in foods owing to their physicochemical and nutritional properties. A positive trend in world date production is observed every year, emphasizing the importance of exploiting date pits containing numerous bioactive constituents for the benefit of mankind and as an extended income for this sector.55 As the major by-product of date processing industries, date seeds are utilized in different forms based on their nature of applications, such as defatted date seeds, date seed flour hydrolysate, dietary fiber concentrates from date seeds, and date seed oils.

Date seeds contain a comparatively higher proportion of dietary fibers, approximately 70%, compared to pulp. The major components of these dietary fibers are insoluble, with a lower proportion being soluble. The dietary fibers in date seeds primarily consist of cellulose and hemicellulose, mainly gluco and galacto-mannans.71 The composition of these fibers, along with their water and oil holding capacity and emulsifying abilities, has paved the way for their application in foods fortified with natural fibers.70

It is estimated that, on average, 3900 tons of date seed oil could be extracted from date pits annually.72 The superior quality of date seed oils is attributed to their lower acidity and peroxide values compared to refined vegetable oils, such as sunflower oil, indicating their lower oxidation potential. Furthermore, the oil derived from date seed extraction is rich in monounsaturated fatty acids and lipid-soluble antioxidants like phenols and phytosterols, which have the potential to lower the likelihood of various diseases.73

The oil extracted from date seeds contains more saturated fatty acids than unsaturated ones, with oleic and linoleic acids being the major mono-unsaturated fatty acids, and lauric, myristic, and palmitic acids being the major saturated fatty acids. The ratio of oleic to linoleic acids determines the quality of the extracted oil.69,74 Oleic acid is generally considered advantageous for health due to its low saturation level, trans-isomer content, and its ability to act against increasing LDL cholesterol levels. The physicochemical characteristics of the oil hint towards its oxidation and thermal stability, making it a suitable candidate for use as edible oil.72

The oxidative stability of seed oil is explained in terms of its higher average tocopherol content, observed in date seed oils compared to olive and peanut oils. The key mechanism governing this is the ability of date seeds to scavenge free radicals, thereby protecting cells from oxidative stress. Carotenoid, a phytochemical in the form of β-carotene, is present in date seeds and oil in major quantities. The quantity of carotenoid is considered an important parameter for assessing the oil quality, as this phytochemical directly correlates with the color of the oil.36,53 Given the annual global wastage of date seeds, the date seed oil resulting from extraction is a promising potential ingredient in the food, medical, pharmaceutical, and chemical sectors.

2.2 Date pomace

Date pomace, a by-product of the date syrup industry, constitutes approximately 50% of the weight of date syrup.75 Date fruit pomace, generated during the production of date products such as pitted dates, date syrup, and confectionery, is a readily available and cost-effective substrate with a high content of reducing sugars, approximately 35%.45,76,77 Hot water-assisted extraction of date syrup leaves behind 8–15 g/100 g and 17–24 g/100 g date seeds and date fruit pomace, respectively, as major industrial wastes.78,79 Similar to date seeds, date fruit pomaces from syrup processing units, consisting of exhausted date flesh and residual sugars, are released in huge quantities annually, either being dumped into open lands as industrial waste or used in animal feed.80,81

Date pomace is an excellent source of dietary fiber, protein, residual sugars, and fat, with the former around 45 g/100 g of dry weight, making it a potential polysaccharide source.82 It also contains microelements, such as manganese, calcium, iron, zinc, magnesium, and potassium, in the range of 10.9–625 mg kg−1, respectively, along with carotenoids.83,84 Dietary fiber in pomace comprises non-starch polysaccharides, such as arabinoxylans, cellulose, and other constituents like resistant starch, inulin, lignin, chitins, pectins, beta-glucans, and oligosaccharides. The antioxidant potential of pomace is explained by its total phenolic content in the range of 170–260 mg gallic acid equivalents GAE/100 g,45 151 mg/100 g,81 and by the presence of associated phenolic compounds, such as flavonoids, phenolic acids, quinones, sterols, and anthocyanins.84 Further characterization revealed that fructose was the main simple sugar and that oleic acid was the prominent fatty acid in date pomace.85

Date press cake, another by-product of date syrup processing, has been largely underutilized in the food industry and consists of a mixture of fibrous material from date flesh and crushed date seeds. It is characterized by its light brown powder-like appearance owing to natural pigments like carotenoids and anthocyanins, present in date seeds and fruit. In studies on fully ripe Shahani date fruits in Iran, Majzoobi et al. (2019)85 observed that date press cake is moist and contains carbohydrates (79%), crude fiber (11%), protein (6%), and fat (4.9%). Despite the low fat content, in-depth lipid profiling has shown the presence of higher levels of monounsaturated fatty acids, such as oleic acid. Phenolic compounds are in the range of 17.79 mg GAE per g, and flavonoids in the form of quercetin represent 1.89 mg quercetin per g flavonoids in the press cake, possibly hinting towards their antioxidant potential. The quantity of the most bioactive components in press cake varies with the part from which they are extracted and is strongly influenced by the date pressing/juicing process.79

3. Application of date by-products in food applications

3.1 Date pomace as a functional ingredient in food formulations

The suitability of using date fruit and its by-products for health-promoting functional food formulation is gaining attention in the scientific community, attributed to the diverse groups of inherent phytochemicals present in them. Date pulp, rich in critical nutritional and health-promoting contents, such as vitamins, minerals, polysaccharides, polyphenols, and proteins,86,87 is considered an important component of the human diet.8 Although traditionally consumed directly, the increased interest and knowledge about bioactive products and nutritional value have led to the processing of dates into various products like date juice, jam, sugar, and syrups. However, this processing generates about 1.5 million tons of waste annually, including date pomaces (DP), posing a disposal challenge for processors.88

DP is an underutilized co-product of date processing, composed of moisture and residual sugars from date pulp, containing a significant amount of organic compounds.50,85,89 Currently, there are limitations to the utilization of date pomaces. Production statistics estimate that date syrup generates about 52–64% of date syrup, 17–24% of fibrous DP, and, finally, 8–15% of date seeds.79 Presently, some generated pomaces from the date processing industries are used either as animal feeds or feed additives, while significant amounts end up in landfills. Unfortunately, these wastes contain a substantial amount of moisture and organic compounds that degrade, forming leachate and offensive odors that cause environmental pollution.80,90 The deposition of these pomaces in the environment raises concerns for global waste management, sustainability, and public health, given the inherent ecological threats and the potential spread of diseases due to bacteria, pests, and rodent survival.80,91

As a by-product of date processing industries, date pomace (DP) has been documented to be rich in valuable residual biomacromolecules, macro and micronutrients, and oxidation inhibiting agents.46,92,93Fig. 4 illustrates the different valuable components of DP. Specifically, Iranian Shahani date fruit pomaces were evaluated by Majzoobi et al. (2019)85 to contain 79.1% carbohydrate, 11.7% crude fiber, 13.4% moisture, 4.9% fat, and 6.3% protein. Despite the abundance of valuable biomacromolecules, DP remains one of the underutilized fruit by-products, especially in the food industry. Researchers have identified a lack of technical knowledge about the health, nutritional, and potential effects of DP on overall food quality as major limitations hindering the use of DP as a functional ingredient in the food industry.83,85,94

Currently, there is increasing research on DP valorization as a microbial fermentation substrate. Interestingly, DP is rich in antioxidants and dietary fibers that can be incorporated into different food products as functional ingredients while promoting the principles of the circular economy and sustainability. This approach will not only foster the production of functional and healthier foods but also reduce morbidity and mortality due to degenerative diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. Examples of such functional and healthier foods include bakery, confectionery, and dairy products.95 The incorporation of date and its by-products into foods, such as meat, cheese, bakery products, pastries, and cheese, has been documented in the literature.21Table 3 shows different food products fortified with date pomace as raw materials or supplements.

Overall, bakery and pastry products have been extensively formulated using DP as functional ingredients to replace sugar and flour or to act as a source of fiber to improve the sensory, nutritional, and physicochemical properties of the products. Generally, bakery products, such as bread, cookies, cakes, and biscuits, have a high glycemic index (GI). Interestingly, accumulated evidence suggests that fortification of these products with fruit and vegetable by-products correlates with reduced GI owing to enhanced digestion of the carbohydrate component by the soluble fibers and phenolic compounds present in the by-products.54,96–99 All the fortified food products reported in Table 3 have shown improved nutritional, sensory, rheological, and physicochemical properties due to the incorporated date pomace. Bchir et al. (2014)100 highlighted some potential mechanisms by which DP improves dough performance and bread quality in their study. The increased water absorption (55–60%) and dough volume (166–169 g) were attributed to the hydrogen bonding of the hydroxy groups of date pomace dietary fibers and water. Similarly, an increased dough gelatinization temperature ranging from 66.4 to 69.6 °C was reported to result from the competition between incorporated DP and starch for water, leading to a decrease in water absorption and an increase in dough gelatinization temperature. The interaction of DP with flour protein interrupts the starch–gluten complex, increasing dough stability from 4.0 to 31.0 min, which indicates good dough strength. Additionally, the reduced dough viscosity and extensibility were associated with starch–gluten complex interruption and DP-flour protein interaction, respectively.100 Date pulp was supplemented in bread as a sucrose alternative by Nwanekezi et al. (2015).101 The authors concluded that the nutritional characteristics measured in relation to dietary fiber and protein significantly increased with an increase in date pulp quantity.

Biscuits are an essential product of the food industry and are consumed as snacks or desserts. Currently, consumers are skeptical about the consumption of biscuits owing to their high sugar and fat contents, leading to them being labeled as unhealthy foods.102,103 To address this concern, researchers have suggested that fortifying ingredients and proportions with fruits and vegetable by-products containing bioactive phytochemicals can help produce biscuits that meet the requirements of healthy and functional foods for the prevention of chronic diseases, health maintenance, and promotion.104,105 Based on previous studies on the fortification of food products with date pomace (DP), Sheir (2022)83 investigated the potential of formulating vegan biscuits and protein bars. The author concluded that the use of DP in producing vegan biscuits and protein bars has economic and health value, especially for athletes, vegetarians, and adolescents, owing to the high content of recommended dietary allowances as well as the nutritional, sensorial, and physicochemical properties of the products.

Cookies, another essential bakery product with a longer shelf life, high energy, and global consumption as a quick snack, are characterized by low moisture, resulting in comparatively low microbial spoilage and enhanced shelf stability.106 Similar to biscuits, cookies are often rich in high sugar, which is associated with metabolic disorders, raising concerns about their consumption among certain age groups. The use of commercial wheat or composite flour has been criticized as “slow poison” owing to refining and bleaching.107 Ajibola et al. (2015)108 reported the practicability of fortifying cookies with ingredients, such as fruit by-products, tailored to the nutritional and therapeutic requirements of consumers. Considering the abundance of biological macromolecules in DP, especially residual sugar, Ikechukwu et al. (2017)107 utilized DP as a sucrose replacer in cookies, with the fortified products considered ideal for patients suffering from metabolic disorders and as functional foods. The authors concluded that the inclusion of DP as a sugar replacer in cookies improved the flour functional properties, as well as the physicochemical and proximate properties of the cookies.

There is an increasing campaign for the reduction of animal protein and fats, with a focus on the increased consumption of cereals rich in dietary fiber by health authorities.109,110 Similarly, the consumption of pasta as a cereal product has been recommended as a nutrient supplement by the World Health Organization.111 Traditional pasta is deficient in required nutrients that can foster a positive health status in consumers.112 Researchers have proposed the use of non-durum wheat flour with dietary fiber-rich ingredients to produce tailored pasta with functional properties for health promotion and maintenance. In the past, legumes and other cereal flours have been supplemented for pasta production, increasing the tenacity and quality of products.111–113 Recently, Bchir et al. (2022)110 formulated a new pasta product from DP flour. The authors concluded that DP positively influenced the physicochemical properties, sensorial and organoleptic properties, as well as cooking quality of the fortified pasta. In particular, DP inclusion increased the fiber content, swelling index, and cooking water absorption of fortified pasta while significantly reducing the optimum cooking time. Another researcher also included DP as a source of dietary fiber in yogurt, where it was observed that DP inclusion reduces syneresis while improving whey retention, textural, and sensory properties of the yogurt.114

The modification of products with date by-products has been a subject of debate among researchers, with some arguing that it may impact the overall quality of new products.115 Consequently, studies evaluating sensory aspects and product quality indicators, such as texture, aroma, and flavor, have been conducted. In summary, most of these studies have reported positive quality parameters, including color, texture, and aroma, as well as high consumer acceptance of modified products.116

For instance, Sánchez-Zapata et al., (2011)35 found improved sensory quality in meat products treated with date by-products. Similarly, Martín-Sánchez et al., (2014)34 reported that technological and sensorial characteristics remained unchanged in dry-cured sausage treated with 5% date by-products paprika compared with the traditional prototype. Another study focused on sausages incorporated with date pomace powder also confirmed satisfactory sensory and technological properties, with a high acceptance rate from the panelists.117

3.2 Potential applications of using date seeds in food products

Date pits are recognized for their substantial content of fiber, tannins, and, potentially, resistant starch, which may offer notable health benefits. They are considered an excellent source of dietary fiber, with total dietary fiber ranging from 63.81 to 80.2 g per 100 g, of which 53–55 g/100 g consists of insoluble dietary fiber, including hemicellulose, cellulose, and lignin.61,69,118–120 According to Hamada et al. (2002),61 date pit fiber is reported to have a higher percentage of approximately 65–69% neutral detergent fiber, suggesting the possible presence of lignin and some resistant starch. Dietary fiber encompasses several health benefits, including its effectiveness against hypertension, coronary heart disease, elevated cholesterol levels, cancer, and digestive issues, as demonstrated by various studies.120–122 The primary components of dietary fiber polysaccharides are β-glucan, arabinoxylans, and cellulose. Dietary fibers play a crucial role in the food and therapeutic industries, particularly in the baking and confectionery sectors. The increasing demand for these fibers stems from their advantages, such as antidiabetic, anti-obesity, cholesterol absorption limitation, and gut microbiome-promoting potential.123 Notably, fibers in date seed powder have been reported to have potential therapeutic effects for lifestyle diseases, such as diabetes, obesity, and hyperlipidemia. Laboratory rats treated with date seed extracts exhibited improved glucose tolerance, reduced levels of creatinine and alkaline phosphatase and showed no signs of acute cytotoxicity, suggesting the anti-lipidemic and anti-diabetic potential of seeds.124 Date seeds are effectively hydrolyzed by bile acids to release adequate dietary fibers in the diet.125 The prominent dietary fiber content in date seeds and their effective release into the human system extend their application in functional foods and dietary supplements. Additionally, date seeds contain various minerals, including sodium, iron, magnesium, potassium, calcium, zinc, manganese, copper, cobalt, and cadmium, among which sodium, potassium, and magnesium constitute the major part.49 The utilization of date seeds as a food ingredient is further supported by the absence of antinutritional components in the seeds, preventing interference with minerals and protein in the body.126

Antioxidant activity is primarily explained by the phenolic content of plants. Plant-based phenolic compounds, serving as natural sources of antioxidants, are considered excellent candidates for delaying the lipid oxidation reaction in foods.64 This preservation action helps maintain nutritional quality and extends the shelf stability of food products. In comparison to synthetic antioxidants, natural phenols preserve the taste and flavor of fortified food products. Additionally, phenolic compounds have the potential to act as antimicrobial agents that are effective in modifying intracellular pH, chelating metals essential for microbial viability, and altering microbial cell membrane permeability.127

Date seeds exhibit a range of beneficial properties, as reviewed by Maqsood et al., 2020,36 including antioxidant activity by inhibiting lipid peroxidation and scavenging free radicals; antibacterial activity by inhibiting the growth of both major Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria; antifungal activity, particularly against Fusarium oxysporum; anticancer activity by inhibiting cell proliferation in tumor lines; antihyperglycemic activity by regulating glucose levels, performed by protocatechuic acid and caffeic acid; and anti-inflammatory activity via the aid of rutin, quercetin, p-coumaric, and caffeic acids.128–130 Additionally, date palm pit extracts tested for their antiviral effects against lytic Pseudomonas phage ATCC 14209-B1 clearly displayed antiviral properties of extracts, with a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of less than 10 mg mL−1, limiting the infectivity of the phage and completely preventing the lysis of bacterial cells.131 This finding raises the prospect of exploring industrial waste as a potential novel functional ingredient in food systems.

Most recent studies have focused on replacing synthetic functional food ingredients with date by-products with comparable activities. Nowadays, the valorization of by-products from the food industry by reincorporating them into the food chain is one of the main approaches used to improve the sustainability of food production through the reduction of the amount of waste generated, thus promoting a circular economy. Some of the potential applications of date seeds in their natural and modified forms in different food sectors are presented in Table 2. The utilization of date seeds (raw, roasted, powdered, and defatted) and their secondary products, such as dietary fiber, and oils, has been reported by researchers in bakery and confectionery,132,133 beverage,134 meat, dairy, and among the major industrial food sectors (Fig. 3).

Table 2 Various applications of date seeds in food products
Sector of application Product type Nature of date pit Effective level/percentage Quality attributes impacted References
Beverage Coffee Roasted and powdered date pit 9% 9% roasted date seed powder is a coffee substitute with coffee-like properties and fewer health risks Venkatachalam and Sengottian (2016)232
Coffee-like beverages Roasted and powdered date pit N.A The beverage had lower total phenolics, antioxidants, color, bitterness, and coffee flavor than traditional Arabic coffee Ghnimi et al. (2015)233
Coffee Roasted and powdered date pit C1-100% Date pit coffee with additives had low caffeine content, no cytotoxicity, high nutrition, antioxidants, and acceptability exceeding control coffee Ragab and Yossef (2019)138
C2-92.5%
C3-61.67%
Cocoa substitute beverage Roasted and powdered date pit 9% Water–milk with roasted date seeds was preferred over cocoa. It has potential health benefits El Sheikh et al. (2014)69
Bakery and confectionary Enriched bread Powdered date pit 4–12% Date pit powder added to bread increased soluble fiber, while wheat flour blended with 12% date pit powder resulted in higher firmness Alamri et al. (2014)234
Bread Powdered date pit fiber 10% Bread with higher dietary fiber content can be made to have a comparable sensory profile to wheat bran bread Najafi (2011)119
Bread Intact and defatted date pit powder 5, 10, and 15% Date pit powder improved water absorption and dough efficiency. 5% in bread created a unique sensory profile (Khodaparast et al., 2007)
Pita bread Date pit powder Flour substituted with 5, 10, 15 and 20% date seed powder Fortified bread had comparable dietary fibers, increased flavonoids, phenolic compounds (flavan-3-ols), antioxidant potential, and limited acrylamide content compared to whole wheat bread Platat et al. (2015)162
Mayonnaise Date seed oil NA Date seed oil in mayonnaise outperformed corn oil for better sensory qualities Basuny and Al-Marzooq (2011)145
Butter cake Date seed powder 2.5% Butter cakes with 2.5% ground date seed powder exhibited similar sensory and nutritional properties but had negative bulking, pasting, and baking characteristics Ammar et al. (2013)235
Cookies Fine seed powder 2.5–7.5% Seed powder influenced cookie lightness and hardness; higher additions resulted in darker and crispier cookies. Cookies with 7.5% seed powder in whole wheat flour showed the highest acceptability Najjar et al. (2022)133
Chocolate spread Dietary fiber from seeds 5% Seed powders enhanced water and oil binding capacity, emulsion stability, and overall acceptability Bouaziz et al. (2017)236
Baker's yeast Date seed hydrolysate 3% w/v of date seed hydrolysates, rice straw, and date flesh as carbon source 9.12 g L−1 baker's yeast obtained after 18 h fermentation with Saccharomyces cerevisiae at 30 °C Salem et al. (2016)237
Meat and poultry Cooked ground beef Date pit extract 0.5, 0.75, and 1% Khalas date pit extract enhanced minced beef with potent antioxidants, phenolic content, TBA reduction potential, and superior sensory characteristics Amany et al. (2012)238
Beef burger Date seed powder 1.5, 3, and 6% Beef burgers fortified with seed powder exhibited improved cooking and sensorial properties, lower lipid oxidation, and microbial contamination during shelf-life Sayas-Barberá et al. (2020)116
Beef burger Date seed powder 25, 50, 75, and 100% Replacing breadcrumbs with 25% date seed powder led to reduced lipid oxidation, microbial contamination, and improved cooking properties and sensory acceptance in burgers Alqahtan et al. (2022)239
Dairy Spreadable processed cheese Date seed powder 0, 1, 5, and 10% Fortified cheese with 1% and 5% seed powder showed significant differences in total solids and fiber contents, with favorable sensory acceptance Darwish et al. (2020)240
Processed cheese Fiber from date seeds 0, 5, 10, 15, and 20% Partial substitution of butter by date seed fiber in processed cheese positively impacted nutritive value but negatively affected texture. Cheese with 5% and 10% seed fibers showed overall acceptability Alqahtani et al. (2023)146
Kareish cheese Date seed powder 0.5, and 1% Kareish cheese supplemented with date seed and oat fibers showed improved storage characteristics, resulting in higher yield and total solid content with reduced coagulation and setting time Basiony et al. (2018)241
Prebiotic Date pit NA Fiber-fortified Kareish cheese demonstrated an increased presence of lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria, suggesting a potential probiotic effect with overall acceptability in flavor and texture Khiyami et al. (2008)242
Probiotic yoghurt Date seed powder 0.5% Date seed powder as a natural stabilizer in set yogurt positively influenced the growth of Lactococcus lactis, enhancing rheology and sensory attributes. Increased seed powder concentrations led to decreased titratable acidity and excellent water holding capacity during storage El-Kholy (2018)243


Table 3 Various application date pomace in food products
S/N Food Uses Product indicator Pomace preparation condition Concentration used Optimum concentration used Outcome Reference
1 Biscuit Flour replacement Quality characteristics Oven dried at 120 °C for 30 min 20, 25 and 30% 30% Increased ether extract, ash, crude fiber and mineral content Saleh et al. (2022)103
Reduced protein, carbohydrate and energy
Reduced moisture content and water activity
Significant reduction in pH during storage
Better sensory properties and acceptability
2 Cookies Sugar substitute Proximate and physical properties Oven dried at 75 °C for 6 – 8 hours 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50% 30% Increased swelling index, OHC, pH and viscosity Ikechukwu et al. (2017)107
Increased proximate composition except for carbohydrate and protein
Increased physical properties except for break strength
3 Cookies Flour replacement Microstructure and functional attribute Oven dried at 60 °C for 10–12 h 2, 4 and 6% 4% Increase in water absorption, moisture, ash, crude fiber, protein and fat content Shabnam, et al. (2020)244
Decrease in spread ratio, diameter, hardness and air space
Increase in cookie thickness
4 Pasta Flour complement Functional, rheological and sensory properties Oven-dried for 7 h at 70 °C 2.5, 5, 7, and 10% 2.5% Increased energy and fiber content Bchir et al. (2022)110
Reduced cooking time, adhesiveness, and extensibility
Enhanced swelling index, cooking water absorption, water activity, firmness, and tenacity of pasta
5 Yoghurt Source of fiber Sensory and physical properties 2, 4, 6% 4% Improved whey retention textural properties Hamdia (2016)114
Reduced syneresis
Improved sensory qualities
Lower microbial contaminant
6 Bread Source of fiber Nutritional and techno-functional properties 2% Comparable dough volume Bchir et al. (2014)100
Increased water absorption, stability, tenacity, and dietary fiber
Reduced extensibility, softening, breakdown and setback
More aerated internal crumb structure comparable with the control during storage
7 Batter and cake Flour complement Rheological, physical and nutritional properties 10, 20, 30, and 40%. Particle sizes 210 μm and 500 μm 10% and 210 μm Increased batter consistency, firmness, density, stickiness, cohesiveness and viscosity Majzoobi et al. (2019)85
Increased cake density, hardness, and antioxidant content
Reduced pH, cohesiveness, volume and crust moisture content of cake
8 Cereal bars Source of fiber Physicochemical, sensory and nutritional characteristics Oven-dried at 70 °C for 7 h 6, 10, 14% 10% Low water activity Bchir et al. (2018)245
High energy
Darker color
Texture parameters are comparable with the control
9 Bread Source of fiber Textural properties Oven dried at 40 °C 0.5%, 1%, 2% and 3% 3% Reduce water activity during storage Borchani et al. (2015)246
Increased hardness and firmness
Springiness was comparable with the control
Significant decrease in the staling rate of 1 and 3% supplementation
10 Dough and bread Source of fiber Dough performance and bread quality Oven dried at 40 °C 0.5, 1, 2 and 3% levels 3% Increased bread yield and stability Borchani et al. (2011)247
Sensory scores are comparable with the control
High acceptability ratings by the consumer panel
11 Vegan biscuits Flour supplement Quality and nutritional value 5, 10 or 15% 10% Higher acceptability and physical properties compared to control Sheir (2022)83
Higher shelf life and recommended dietary allowance
Higher moisture, protein, fiber, iron, zinc, calcium, potassium, magnesium, and manganese but lower ash and fat content
Increased hardness and cohesiveness
Reduced springiness, gumminess, and chewiness
12 Vegan protein bars Flour supplement Quality and nutritional value 10 g Higher sensorial score in flavor, taste, texture, and overall acceptability Sheir (2022)83
Higher willingness to buy
Higher hardness and cohesiveness while gumminess and chewiness are low
Higher in protein, fiber, ash, and minerals
Lower fat, carbohydrates, energy, and moisture



image file: d3fb00224a-f3.tif
Fig. 3 Application of date seeds and their derivatives in foods.

image file: d3fb00224a-f4.tif
Fig. 4 Valuable components of date pomace.

The significant application of date seed by-products is evident in the bakery and confectionery sectors, leveraging the potential functionality of the seeds and offering considerable value-addition potential. The current trend in the food industry is a shift towards natural, green ingredients and processes, replacing conventional ones. The contemporary lifestyle, characterized by a fast-paced environment and a preference for instant, ready-to-eat, and value-added products, has particularly benefited from industrially relevant date seed wastes. Loaves of bread supplemented with water-soluble polysaccharides and hemicellulose extracted from date seeds demonstrated improved functional qualities, enhancing emulsification, water and oil holding, and foaming properties. This improvement led to significant enhancements in the rheological and textural properties of dough.132 This study suggests that date seed components, particularly seed fibers, could effectively enhance the functional properties of baked goods.

Another investigation by Amin et al. (2019)135 delved into cookies incorporated with date powder. The resulting cookies, except for those with 10% powdered date seeds, showed reduced diameter, thickness, and spread ratio, negatively affecting the textural properties of the cookies. Najjar et al. (2022)133 developed cookies by substituting wheat flour with date seed powder at three different levels (2.5%, 5.0%, and 7.5%) and baking at distinct temperatures (180 and 200 °C). The composite cookies revealed notable total phenolics and flavonoids, imparting enhanced antioxidant potential to the cookies. Traditional pan bread supplemented with 5%, 10%, and 15% date pit powder was developed and studied by Halaby (2014).136 The results indicated that loaves of bread with 15% added seed powder were more accepted compared to the control and other formulations. When tested on rats, the fortified bread showed significant reductions in blood glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, LDL, and HDL cholesterol levels. Dietary fibers from date seeds obtained by defatting date seed powder were studied as a novel source of dietary fiber.137 Comparative studies of date seed dietary fiber and commercially available fiber from sugar beet residues suggest that the former is superior in terms of dietary fiber content, purity, and richness. However, studies on the partial substitution of both fibers in the same range (2.5% and 5%) of wheat flour for bread production revealed that bread fortified with 2.5% of both fibers was not significantly different from control bread with no fiber content. These findings highlight both the potential benefits and challenges associated with incorporating date seed derivatives into baked food products, emphasizing their impact on different physical and functional properties.

Coffee and tea stand out as the most preferred beverages worldwide. However, ongoing debates question the healthiness of these beverages for all population sectors. Pregnant women and children, in particular, are advised to limit their caffeine consumption, which is higher in coffee. Coffee with a high caffeine content is reported to have major side effects, such as sleeplessness, nervousness, and an increased heart rate.138 Recently, there has been growing interest in studying alternative coffee beans to mitigate these well-known adverse effects. Studies have explored the full or partial replacement of coffee with date seed powder to develop coffee-like healthy beverages. Three different types of coffee were made using roasted date pit powder and other functional additives, C1 (roasted date pits alone), C2 (date pits, cardamom, button roses, nutmeg, and cloves), and C3 (date pits, barley, cardamom, button roses, nutmeg, and cloves), all of which had a higher nutritional value compared to commercial coffee.138 The caffeine content of C3 was significantly lower than that of commercial coffee, with 2.99 mg g−1 in the former and 36.02 mg g−1 in the latter, whereas the antioxidant activity of C3 was higher than that of the rest of the samples. Notably, despite the low caffeine content, C3 was best accepted in sensory trials, outperforming commercial coffee.

The production and consumption of meat and meat products present significant challenges to the food industry, with a growing emphasis on quality and safety for both manufacturers and consumers. Essential aspects determining consumer perception of meat, such as tenderness and juiciness, are closely linked to meat oxidation. Date seeds exhibit the potential to prevent collagen and lipid oxidation in meats owing to the presence of phenolic compounds, such as tannins.24 Condensed tannins form hydrogen bonds with meat proteins, acting as antioxidants and preserving meat tenderness.139 This concept was applied by Nor et al. (2022)140 in a study on the tenderizing effect of date seed powder on lamb and beef. The addition of date seed powder resulted in a reduction in the major textural properties of marinated lamb and beef samples compared to the control, with a comparable decrease in water holding capacity and cooking loss in meat samples with increased date seed powder.

Another noteworthy effect was observed in the improvement of shelf life and bioactivity of marinated fresh meat by date seed extract, as investigated by Abdelrahman et al. (2022).141 Meat samples treated with 2% seed extract showed an overall reduction in total volatile nitrogen, TBAR level, and aerobic bacterial counts compared to the control, extending the shelf life and preventing the growth of pathogenic strains, such as Salmonella and Campylobacter. Essa and Elsebaie (2018)142 proposed another application of date seed powder as a fat replacement agent in meat products. Burger samples with date pit powder (25%, 50%, and 75%) as a substitute for animal fat exhibited improved nutritional, functional, and cooking quality of beef burgers. The substitution retained fat and moisture, crucial attributes for consumer satisfaction, and demonstrated greater stability against lipid oxidation, associated with higher polyphenol contents. Bouaziz et al. (2020)70 formulated low-fat turkey burgers with Deglet Nour date seed flour at various concentrations (3%, 5%, and 10%), demonstrating that burgers made with up to 5% date seed flour had similar textural properties and improved sensory attributes (texture, flavor, and overall acceptance) compared to control samples.

Moreover, the insoluble dietary fibers in date seeds were investigated owing to their potential to improve the techno-functional properties of meat products. The addition of fibers resulted in a considerable reduction in calorie content and an improvement in the texture and quality of meat. For instance, Abdel-Maksoud et al. (2022)143 studied the addition of date seed powder at different levels (0–16%) to beef meatballs, revealing improvements in nutritional, technological, and overall physicochemical characteristics without significant alterations to the sensory qualities of the beef meatballs. The phenolic and antioxidant potential of date seeds prevented the oxidation of native fat in meat to a certain extent. In conclusion, these studies collectively highlight the versatile applicability of date seeds and their co-products in improving and maintaining the quality and nutritional aspects of meat products.

Moving on to polyols, a class of sugar-free sweeteners containing multiple hydroxyl groups, they are employed in food products owing to their lower calorie content compared to sugars. Polyols from date pits were developed through an oxypropylation reaction of natural polymeric material found in date seeds via liquefaction using organic solvents and a catalyst.144 The oil extracted from leftover pits of the Khalas date variety was utilized as a substitute for traditional corn oil in mayonnaise (an emulsion of oil and egg yolk). The mayonnaise containing date pit oil exhibited better sensory qualities compared to commercial mayonnaise, supporting the notion of employing date pit oil as an unconventional choice for making mayonnaise products.145 In a study conducted by Alqahtani et al. (2023),146 date seed powder was explored as an innovative fat replacement and fiber source in processed cheese blocks. They used four different concentrations of date seed powder (5%, 10%, 15%, and 20%) to replace cheese fat, examining the impact on the cheese's chemical composition, microstructure, rheology, and sensory attributes. Partial substitution of butter with date seed fiber in block-type processed cheese positively affected the nutritive value but negatively impacted the texture profile. The fortified cheese exhibited a less compact and wider cheese network structure compared to the control. Cheese with 5% and 10% seed fibers showed overall acceptability.

Finally, the valorization of date by-products towards the development of functional yogurt was reported by Jrad et al. (2022).147 Roasted date seeds (1%, 2%, and 3%) were incorporated into goat and cow milk formulations to develop functional yogurt. Roasting improved the amount of soluble fiber as well as the water holding and swelling capacity of seeds, contributing to the better texture properties of the yogurt. The functional yogurts produced were rich in proteins and appeared dark with the addition of seed powder. Overall, 3% seed powder fortified yogurts from both sources were superior in terms of moisture, protein, viscosity, antioxidant, and water holding capacity.

4. Bioactive components of date seed and pomace

4.1 Polyphenols

The richness and comprehensiveness of the available literature describing the health benefits of phytochemicals, especially polyphenols from fruits and vegetables, have captured the attention of clinicians, public health experts, and scientists, prompting their exploration in the medical, pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, and cosmetic industries Bentrad and Hamida-Ferhat (2020).148–150 Polyphenols, as phyto-macromolecules, offer beneficial health properties when consumed as supplements or fortified in the diet (Al-Alawi et al., 2017).6 These compounds possess antioxidant properties that positively scavenge and eliminate reactive oxygen species (ROS), placing them at the forefront of research in health promotion and maintenance.73,151

Different parts of the date palm have been pharmacologically reported as therapeutic agents for various ailments and disorders, and date fruits have garnered considerable attention, whereas by-products are seldom reported.152 Meta-analytical phytochemical studies of date fruits across producing countries have indicated the abundance of essential bioactive compounds in date by-products, confirming their potential as ingredients for the development of nutraceutical, cosmetic, medical, pharmaceutical, and functional food products with a wide range of health benefits.153–155 Accumulated evidence from the literature indicates the presence of various health-promoting phytochemicals, such as polyphenols, lignin, melanin, tocopherols, anthocyanin, carotenes, tocotrienols, dietary fibers, and phytosterols, in date fruits.

Specifically, date fruits have long been proven and implicated in health and nutritional promotion owing to their richness in antioxidant-producing polyphenolic compounds that can work against oxidative stress and scavenge excess free radicals implicated in diseases such as cardiovascular, Parkinson's, cancer, and Alzheimer's diseases.15 Ethnobotanical studies have also established the treatment of anemia, colds, sore throats, hemorrhoids, bronchopulmonary infections, jaundice, constipation, and demineralization with date pulps and syrup, while green dates are used as natural aphrodisiacs.156 Additionally, the polyphenolic content of dates has been demonstrated to be an anticancer, antimutagenic, anti-inflammatory, and antimicrobial agent.65,157 Researchers have correlated a reduced risk of chronic diseases and high nutraceutical values with diets rich in dietary polyphenols.36,154

More recently, scientists have focused on the valorization of date by-products, specifically date seeds and pomaces, owing to the abundance of similar biomacromolecules found in whole fruits.148 The diverse polyphenols (tannins, sterols, phenolic acids, flavonoids, phytosterols, carotenoids, and volatile compounds) inherently present at high levels in dates and their by-products confirm their uniqueness from polyphenols in other fruits (such as apple, banana, red grapes, mandarin, orange, apricot, pomegranate, and blueberry).34,158 Although variations exist in the concentration, structure, formulation, and distribution of polyphenols in date fruits depending on the cultivar, season, location, maturity, agronomic practices, and storage conditions, date and its by-products are generally rich in polyphenolic compounds that confer health benefits by scavenging and blocking the activities of free radicals and ROS implicated in the etiology of chronic human degenerative diseases, such as cancer and cardiovascular diseases.148,151 In dates, phenolic acids and flavonoids are the major polyphenolic compounds; however, the presence of tannins has also been reported. Flavonoids and phenolic acids are important phyto-metabolites with remarkable antioxidant properties against ROS, promoting cellular protection against oxidative stress and damage, as well as positive health outcomes in humans.159,160

Researchers have meticulously documented more than 13 flavonoids and 19 flavonoid isomers in dates and their by-products, predominantly including isorhamnetin, luteolin, malonyl, apigenin, quercetin, chrysoeriol, 3-methyl-isorhamnetin, sulfates, and kaempferol, each exhibiting varying degrees of antioxidant properties.157,161 Polyphenolic compounds, particularly flavonoids, are widely distributed in date seeds. A quantitative estimation of the polyphenolic content in three Moroccan date seed cultivars revealed a range of 1224–1844 mg/100 g of flavonoids.130 Another study investigated the polyphenolic content of the Khalas date seed variety using mass spectrometry, reporting a total polyphenolic content of 5.1 g/100 g, significantly higher than those reported in grape seeds and flaxseeds.162

The abundance of flavonoids in date seeds was further documented by Habib et al. (2014),65 with flavan-3-ols accounting for 99% of the total polyphenol content in date seeds. However, hydroxycinnamic acids have been identified as the most abundant phenolic acids in dates and their by-products. A study conducted by Al-Farsi and Lee (2008)53 revealed the presence of four different hydroxycinnamic acids (vanillic acid, protocatechuic, p-hydroxybenzoic, and gallic) in date seeds, while Kchaou et al. (2016)163 reported the presence of hydroxybenzoic acid in date flesh, underscoring the richness of date by-products in phenolic acids.

Moreover, a comprehensive study on the characterization of flavonoids and phenolic acids in date palm fruits unveiled the presence of 5 flavonoids (myricetin, rutin, quercetin, catechin, and epicatechin) and 10 phenolic acids (chlorogenic, p-coumaric, salicylic, gallic, trans-cinnamic, sinapic, ellagic, vanillic, caffeic, syringic, and ferulic).164 Ajwa dates have been extensively studied owing to their richness and abundance of polyphenols, such as rutin, catechin, and caffeic acid, in the range of 10–290 mg/100 g depending on the fruit's maturity.55,165,166 Total phenolic content analysis conducted by Wu et al. (2004)167 revealed a range of 199.43–576.48 mg/100 g and 226–955 mg/100 g of fresh date in six Tunisian and ten Algerian date varieties, respectively.

Date polyphenolic compounds, in addition to their antioxidant properties, are known to exert various health benefits, including anticancer, anti-obesity, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antiallergic, vasodilatory, cardioprotective, renoprotective, hepatoprotective, antigenotoxic, antimutagenic, and gastrointestinal protective effects.168,169 Pharmacological studies have also correlated the consumption of date fruits with a reduced glycemic index, antiaging effects, and relief from constipation.40

4.1.1 Antioxidant properties of date by-product polyphenols. The escalating statistics and widespread prevalence of chronic diseases, coupled with the challenges of low potency or resistance to existing treatments and therapeutics, pose a global threat and a state of emergency in the public health domain. These concerns are exacerbated by consumer awareness of potential health risks, toxicity, and the financial implications of chemosynthetic antioxidants. Consequently, nutritional intervention through diet modification and fortification has been identified as a potential solution.163,170

Despite the reported richness of date seeds and pomace in valuable bioactive components, such as polyphenols, they are still treated as common waste with limited applications and underutilization. Accumulated evidence from the literature indicates that the high antioxidant activities of date seeds (DS) are attributed to their richness in polyphenolic compounds.134,171 Thus, date by-products could be explored as a source of natural preservatives with potential applications in the pharmaceutical, medical, and food industries. Pharmacological, nutritional, and clinical evidence has positioned polyphenols as novel natural bioactive compounds, garnering attention from researchers for various health and industrial applications owing to their established antioxidant properties.163

Quantitatively, the polyphenolic content of DS was estimated to range from 1864.82 to 4768.87 mg GAE/100 g, while the profile analysis of the polyphenolic content revealed flavan-3-ols (catechins and epicatechins) as the most abundant polyphenols (47.91–50.18 g kg−1), closely followed by phenolic acids (protocatechuic acid, p-hydroxybenzoic acid, and caffeoylshikimic acid).172,173

Researchers have correlated the abundance of phenolic acids and flavonoids in date seeds and pomaces with the observed high antioxidant potentials reported in the literature.36,174 For instance, a study conducted in China on 28 fruits and their by-products ranked dates as the second-highest fruit with remarkable antioxidant values.175 In a study on seeds of three Moroccan date cultivars, the authors established a strong positive correlation between phenolic acids and flavonoid contents with high antioxidant properties evaluated with FRAP and ABTS.130

A similar study on 100 μg mL−1 of aqueous and methanolic extracts from date seeds was reported by Zhang et al. (2017).176 The results showed high antioxidant activities with 50–67% and 58–82%, respectively, for lipid peroxidation inhibition. The methanolic and acetonic extracts of Ajwa date seeds have been reported to exhibit a remarkable antioxidant potential of 74.19 mg per mL GA using DPPH and lipid peroxidation assays.177

Furthermore, an in vitro evaluation of flavonoids conducted by Nijveldt et al. (2001)178 found that flavonoids reduce dehydroascorbic acid. Similarly, polyphenols react with superoxide anion (O-2) and hydroxyl (OH–) radicals to generate highly stable phenoxy radicals. DPPH and ABTS studies of flavonols and hydroxycinnamic acids showed high antioxidant potency against linoleic acid oxidation compared to vitamin C.179,180

However, date pomace (DP) has also been reported to contain a considerable amount of polyphenols and can be used as a source of natural antioxidants.53 The effect of 100 μg of ethyl acetate extracts from Deglet Nour date flesh was evaluated by Mansouri et al. (2005).181 The author concluded that there is a strong positive correlation between phenolic content and antioxidant activities, evidenced by the observed 54% antiradical activity suggested to be influenced by the high quantity of flavonoids and tannins in the extract.

The quantification and antioxidant capacities of the DP of three different cultivars of dates were investigated with the oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) assay by Al-Farsi et al. (2007).79 The authors reported a remarkable quantity of polyphenols in the range of 165–435 mg of GAE/100 g of DP and antioxidant capacities in the range of 134–357 mol of Trolox Equivalents (TE) per g fresh weight of date pomace. Similarly, the half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) technique was used by Majzoobi et al. (2020)182 to demonstrate the antioxidant potential of Shahani DP with four different particle sizes. The authors reported IC50 values of 1.46, 1.46, 1.39, and 1.39 mg mL−1 for 500, 365, 210, and 167 μm of Shahani DP, respectively.

In addition to numerous in vitro studies on the antioxidant properties of date by-product polyphenols, there are documented in vivo studies highlighting the health-promoting benefits of date seed polyphenols. One such study investigated the impact of date by-products on the activities of activated inflammatory leukocytes, which are known to elicit free radicals, exacerbating diseases, such as arthritis and diabetes.15 The effect of different concentrations of date seed consumption for 30 days on oxidative stress and antioxidant levels in male Wistar rats induced by activated inflammatory leukocytes was evaluated by Habib and Ibrahim (2011).183 Although the serological parameters, feed efficiency ratio, hepatic antioxidants, and body weight were unaffected by date seed incorporation, the authors reported a significant reduction in serum and hepatic malondialdehyde (MDA) and dehydrogenase. The decrease in these lipid peroxidation products has been attributed to the phenolic and flavonoid profiles in date seeds.

Another study conducted by Abdelaziz and Ali (2014)184 investigated the effect of date seed consumption on reducing nephron-oxidative stress in the kidneys of rats induced with carbon tetrachloride (CCl4). The authors reported that date seeds significantly reduced MDA and nitric oxide, restored glutathione-S-transferase and superoxide dismutase activities, and preserved kidney histology and functions, all of which are attributed to the polyphenolic contents. A robust antioxidant status, as indicated by a significant reduction in oxidative stress, was observed in the experimental rats fed with date seed-supplemented feed.162 Similarly, Platat et al. (2019)185 reported increased antioxidant activity in humans fed with date seed extract, date seed powder, and Arabic pita bread fortified with date seed.

4.1.2 Antimicrobial properties of date by-product polyphenols. The escalating prevalence of antibiotic-resistant microbes has prompted the exploration of natural antimicrobial compounds as viable alternatives. Both in vivo and in vitro studies on various date fruit cultivars and their by-products have demonstrated noteworthy antimicrobial properties.186 Extracts from date seeds and flesh showcase antifungal and antibacterial activities and possess a substantial level of antiviral properties. For instance, acetonic date seed extracts were reported to inhibit lytic Pseudomonas phage ATCC 14209-B1 activity and prevent bacterial lysis at concentrations lower than 10 mg mL−1.131 This antimicrobial activity is attributed to the binding of polyphenols in the seed extracts to the bacteriophage. In a similar study, Samad et al. (2016)187 reported the broad-spectrum antibacterial activities of date seed extracts, inhibiting both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, including Salmonella typhi, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Bacillus cereus. Additionally, antifungal activities were observed against Fusarium oxysporum. Although there is clear evidence in the literature regarding the antimicrobial properties of date fruits, affirming their potential as an alternative and cost-effective approach to combating human microbial infections, further studies on the antimicrobial mechanisms of date fruit seeds and pomaces are still required.
4.1.3 Anticancer properties of date by-product polyphenols. Presently, major cancer treatments predominantly involve chemotherapy and radiotherapy; however, their documented side effects limit their reliability and use. Consequently, there is a valid exploration of effective alternatives from natural sources. Numerous polyphenols found in date fruits, including catechin, epicatechin, p-hydroxybenzoic acid, protocatechuic acid, and procyanidins, have documented antitumor roles in the literature.188,189 The cytotoxic potential of date seed extracts was investigated on five different cancer cell lines (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, Hep-G2, Caco-2, and PC-3) by Hilary et al. (2021).173 The authors reported a significant reduction in the viability of MCF-7 and Hep-G2 cancer cell lines within 48 hours. Experimental studies have also shown that the methanolic extract of Ajwa dates exerts cytotoxicity against lung, breast, colon, gastric, and prostate cancer cell lines.176In vitro studies on date seed polyphenols revealed a cytotoxic effect against pancreatic cancer cell lines.65 Similarly, date seed polyphenols have been reported to exhibit remarkable antiproliferative effects on the MCF-7 cancer cell line.190 The inhibition of gut tumor cell proliferation and the promotion of beneficial microbiota have been associated with the consumption of dates.41 Although there is a lack of comprehensive information on the anticancer mechanisms of dates and their by-products, some studies suggest that polyphenolic content may be responsible for the anticancer properties of dates.36
4.1.4 Antidiabetic properties of date by-product polyphenols. Diabetes remains prevalent among individuals of various age groups. Current treatments for diabetes management possess limitations owing to their side effects, such as the modification of genetic and metabolic pathways. Intriguingly, phyto-polyphenols have been reported to modulate intestinal glucose absorption and insulin production, effectively contributing to the management of diabetes development.191 More specifically, compounds such as flavonoids, phenolic acids, sterols, and saponins in dates have been demonstrated to exhibit remarkable antidiabetic activities by scavenging free radicals in diabetic-induced rats.192 Hasan and Mohieldein (2016)193 reported the modulation of renal and hepatic functionalities attributed to the consumption of Ajwa date seed extract, and this effect has been associated with the inhibition of α-glucosidase, leading to increased intestinal and renal glucose absorption in the kidneys.171
4.1.5 Other biological functions of date by-product polyphenols. Date by-product polyphenols exhibit noteworthy anti-inflammatory activities. Evaluation using cyclooxygenase enzymes (COX-1 and COX-2) by Zhang et al. (2017)176 revealed 26–36% and 33–41% inhibition for COX-1 enzyme and 45–48% and 48–52% inhibition for COX-2, for aqueous and methanolic extracts, respectively. Additionally, Orabi and Shawky (2014)194 reported a significant increase in mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), hemoglobin level, and mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), with a simultaneous decrease in testicular malondialdehyde levels in male albino rats orally treated with 2 mL per kg per day of date seed extracts for 60 days. In another study, Amany Alsayed et al. (2019)195 evaluated the effects of 1 g per kg per day of date seed nanoparticles infused in Wistar rats as a nutraceutical. The authors confirmed that treatment with date seed extract significantly reduced total cholesterol levels, C-reactive protein, and serum amyloid-alpha in the experimental group compared to the control group. Similarly, Al-Qarawi et al. (2004)196 investigated the effects of aqueous extracts of date seeds on CCl4-induced liver toxicity in Wistar rats. Rats fed with the aqueous extracts of date seeds exhibited a significant reduction in bilirubin concentrations, plasma enzyme levels, and histological damage compared to the control group. The organ and serum antioxidant system of male Wistar rats fed with 2–8 g kg−1 of date seed powder significantly improved compared to the control. Table 4 provides a summary of the applications of date by-product polyphenols in various studies.
Table 4 Different bioactive components from date seeds and pomace
Bioactive ingredients By-product Extraction method Active ingredient Yield Functionality Significant findings Reference
Polyphenols Seeds Methanolic Phenolic acids 44.2 mg GAE per g In vitro antioxidant, reducing power and antiradical activities Date seeds can be used as potential functional food ingredients owing to their high content of phenolics and antioxidant capacity Majid et al. (2023)248
Polyphenols Seeds Natural deep eutectic solvent-microwave assisted extraction Phenolic acids 234.65 mg GAE per g In vitro antioxidant activities Utilization of green extraction solvents coupled with microwave-enhanced total phenolic yield and antioxidant properties Airouyuwa et al. (2023)249
Polyphenols Seeds Natural deep eutectic solvent-ultrasonic assisted extraction Phenolic acids 145.54 mg GAE per g In vitro antioxidant activities A significantly higher amount of phenolic compounds with high antioxidant activities was observed Osamede-Airouyuwa et al. (2022)250
Polyphenols Seed Methanolic–aqueous extraction Phenolic acids 14.12 g kg−1 In vitro digestion The extracted polyphenols are bio-accessible, reach the colon as observed after digestion and are relatively unchanged for gut microbiota metabolism Hilary et al. (2020)251
Polyphenols Seed Ethanol–aqueous Phenolics 750 mg L−1 In vitro anticancer, anti-hyperglycemic, antioxidant and anti-adipogenic activities Significantly reduced viability in MCF-7 and Hep-G2 cells with 48 h treatments Hilary et al. (2021)173
Glucose uptake increased in the adipocytes
Inhibited adipocyte differentiation and lipid accumulation
Functional ingredients in bread Retained antioxidant activity in the digestive milieu
Increased phenolic contents and antioxidant activities after digestion of bread
Polyphenols Seeds Aqueous Phenolic 160.22 mg/100 g In vitro antioxidant activities Date seed is an inexpensive source of phenolic compounds that can be used for antioxidant activities Al-Farsi and Lee (2008)53
Acetone (50%) Flavonoid 193.83 mg/100 g
Polyphenols Seed Supercritical fluid CO2 and subcritical CO2 extraction Phenolic acids 143.48–274.98 mg GAE/100 g In vitro antioxidants Innovative extraction of polyphenols from date seed improves their functional quality and antioxidant activities Ghafoor et al. (2022)153
Flavonoids 78.35–141.78 mg QE/100 g Antiradical
Reducing power
Polyphenols Seed Hydrothermal extraction Phenolic acids 1284.1 mg L−1 Antiradical and oxygen radical absorbance capacity Liquid fraction obtained after the application of a direct steam treatment at two temperatures allows the solubilization of a high quantity of phenolic compounds, making it possible to obtain an extract that is rich in phenols with high antioxidant activity Mrabet et al. (2022)252
Flavonoids
Polyphenols Seeds Dimethyl sulfoxide 3541 mg/100 g In vitro antioxidant activities Iranian date seeds have significant antioxidant properties owing to their phenolic compounds; hence they could be sources of commercial and medicinal natural antioxidants Shams Ardekani et al. (2010)64
Aqueous 1694 mg/100 g
Methanolic 3284 mg/100 g
Formic acid
Lignin Seeds Klason method with ethanol and benzene 26.68% Additive for low-density polyethylene for wastewater treatment membrane preparation Numerous hydroxyl groups in the extracted lignin cause improvement of the membrane hydrophilicity Zrelli et al. (2022)253
Decreased contact angle
Increased membrane porosity
Polyphenols Seeds Ethanolic 8.521% GAE In vivo hepatoprotective activities The ethanol extract of date seed at doses of 150, 300, and 600 mg kg−1 had hepatoprotective activity in carrageenan-induced rats Warsinah et al. (2022)254
Polyphenols Seeds 3102–4430 mg GAE/100 g In vitro antioxidant activities Antioxidant activities are proportional to phenolic extracts Al-Farsi et al. (2007)79
Polyphenols Pomace 165–435 mg GAE/100 g In vitro antioxidant activities Antioxidant activities are proportional to phenolic content Al-Farsi et al. (2007)79
Polyphenols Seed Methanolic extraction Phenolic acids 2.194 g kg−1 Date seeds are a very rich source of polyphenols and can be considered candidates for functional food and nutraceuticals Habib et al. (2014)65
Flavonoids
Polysaccharide Seed Aqueous and oxalate 1.9% Radical scavenging potential, inhibition of glycation end product formation PS via aqueous extraction gave maximum polysaccharide yield with molecular weight 1680 kDa, which had enhanced capabilities in scavenging free radicals, inhibiting glycation end products formation, and inhibiting lipid peroxidation (Marzouk et al., 2017)16
Polysaccharide Seed Hot water Water soluble PS 1.5% Antioxidant and radical scavenging potentials Both extraction methods resulted in seed polysaccharides with excellent water solubility. Date seed PS takes the form of a heteropolysaccharide with excellent antioxidant and radical scavenging potentials (Dhahri et al., 2023)207
Ultrasound assisted 1.03%
Polysaccharides Seed Ultrasound-assisted alkaline extraction 72% In vitro antioxidant and antibacterial activity Xylose was identified as the most abundant monosaccharide of PS. Polysaccharides displayed superior antibacterial and proliferative effects (Noorbakhsh et al., 2023)203


4.2 Polysaccharides

Polysaccharides (PSs) represent a class of biological macromolecules composed of similar or different monosaccharide units linked together by various glycosidic bonds.197 They are the most prevalent natural macromolecular polymers and can be differentiated based on specific monosaccharide units, chain length, and branching. These compounds play a crucial role as natural bioactive components in food matrices owing to their well-established antioxidant, anticancer, antiviral, antibacterial, probiotic, prebiotic, relatively low cytotoxic, and health-promoting properties,198,199 supporting their applications in food matrices. Naturally occurring polysaccharides exhibit diversity in their structural, functional, conformational, and biological characteristics. Researchers have proposed several extraction methods for the efficient extraction of polysaccharides from various sources, which have evolved from traditional hot water extraction to the most recent green solvent extractions, offering a natural, economical, and least toxic approach towards efficient PS extraction (extraction, ultrasound, microwave, DES, etc.).

In the context of date fruit, PS constitutes the predominant bioactive component in both flesh and seeds, making up approximately 80% of their composition. Bendahou et al. (2007)200–202 have documented the extraction of polysaccharides from date palm and its parts. Date flesh is reported to have around 14% polysaccharide, characterized by (1→3)-β-D-glucopyranosyl residues branched saccharide residues at (1→6). Detailed characterization studies have revealed the presence of xylans, primary hemicellulose polymers in date seeds, consisting of β-1,4-linked D-xylose with side chains of L-arabinose, D-galactose, and acetyl groups.203 Libyan date seeds, as a possible valuable source of glucomannan (a neutral polysaccharide consisting of mannose, glucose, arabinose, and rhamnose) and arabinogalactan (an acidic polysaccharide of MW 48000 made of arabinose, galactose, rhamnose, and glucose), were reported by Ishurd et al. (2003).204 β-D Glucans present in date flesh were observed to have a linear structure composed of a combination of (1→3)- and (1→4)-linkages.205 The glucans in dates exist as two major fractions of different molecular masses: fraction I with Mtw 200[thin space (1/6-em)]000 and fraction II with Mtw 10[thin space (1/6-em)]000. These fractions exhibit variations owing to the inclusion of (1/6)-branched chains made up of D-glucose units, with the lowest molecular weight polysaccharide containing Glcp-(1/3)-D-Glcp groups and the highest molecular weight polysaccharide consisting of D-Glcp-(1/3)-D-Glcp units.206 Identification of an alkali-soluble heteroxylan from date seeds, composed of D-xylose and 4-O-methyl-D-glucuronic acid, was reported by Ishurd et al. (2003).204 The polysaccharide was reported to have the structure of an aldobiouronic acid from hemicellulose, which exists as a polymer of (1→4)-linked D-xylopranosyl residues with branched D-xylopyranosyl and 4-O-methyl-α-D-glucopyranosyluronic acid.

Water-soluble PSs were extracted from Ajwa date seeds by Dhahri et al. (2023),207 and the seed variety is known for its antioxidant, antimicrobial, anticancer, and antiviral properties. Two different extraction methods were employed to compare the yield of the extracted PS. Both hot water and ultrasound-assisted extractions resulted in seed polysaccharide yields of 1.5% and 1.03%, respectively, with excellent water solubility. Date seed PSs are structurally like heteropolysaccharides with excellent antioxidant and radical scavenging potentials. Noorbakhsh and Khorasgani (2023)203 employed ultrasound-assisted alkaline extraction of date seed polysaccharides from the Zahidi date variety. Xylose was identified as the most abundant monosaccharide from the extracted polysaccharide, contributing to approximately 72%. The polysaccharide displayed superior antibacterial and proliferative effects compared to standard PS and date flesh polysaccharides. Seed polysaccharides showed positive regulation of gut microbiota because of their prebiotic potential, influenced by their monosaccharide composition, molecular weight, and extraction method.197In vitro digestion studies of date seed PS confirmed their prebiotic potential, as the polysaccharide was stable in the upper digestive tract and later reached the colon to be metabolized by the gut microflora. Intervention and blood biomarker analysis of the polysaccharide indicate its efficiency in reducing serum C-reactive protein (reducing inflammation by supporting the growth of beneficial gut microflora), reducing triglycerides, fasting blood sugar (hypoglycemic effect), and increasing red blood cells (antioxidative effect of the polysaccharide). Marzouk et al. (2017)16 employed aqueous and oxalate extraction of date seeds to yield PS, out of which the former method yielded the maximum, i.e., 1.9% polysaccharide with a molecular weight of 1680 kDa. Water-extracted PS exhibited enhanced capabilities in scavenging free radicals, inhibiting glycation end product formation, and inhibiting lipid peroxidation and protein glycation.

4.3 Melanin

Melanin, a naturally occurring complex secondary metabolite found extensively in animals, plants, fungi, and bacteria, has been substantiated through both in vivo and in vitro examinations to possess diverse health-enhancing properties, such as antioxidative, anti-inflammatory, radioprotective, gastrointestinal, immunomodulatory, hypoglycemic, and anti-hyperlipidemia effects alongside safeguarding internal organs.208–212 Recent studies have revealed that melanin derived from natural sources exhibits heightened antioxidant efficacy attributed to its ability to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS).211 Naturally occurring melanin is made of complex heterogeneous polymers and can be broadly categorized into five groups based on their structural characteristics: eumelanin, pheomelanin, neuromelanin, allomelanin, and pyomelanin.213 Allomelanin is the form of melanin present in date fruits (Alam et al. (2022)),214 which showed excellent radical scavenging activities explained by DPPH and ABTS IC50 values of 63.6 to 75.1 μg mL−1, respectively, and potential hypoglycemic effects.

Green extraction of melanin is quite challenging because of the localized presence of melanin in melanosomes where they are found closely bound to the inner cell wall or the cellular components.215 Elobeid et al. (2017)209 posited that the enzyme tyrosinase facilitates the synthesis of melanin via enzymatic action on the amino acid tyrosine. Initially, tyrosine undergoes hydroxylation and is converted to catecholamine 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine, which is subsequently oxidized to 3,4-dioxyphenylalanine or dopaquinone. In later stages, dopaquinone is cyclized to form 5,6-indole quinones, the polymerization of which leads to the formation of melanin. An elevated concentration of melanin pigments was observed in the date fruits. In date fruits, Al-Amrani et al. (2020)216 identified that the onset of enzymatic browning is triggered by the activity of the enzyme polyphenol oxidase, which interacts with phenolic compounds in the presence of oxygen, leading to a brown compound, O-quinones. O-Quinones undergo a nonenzymatic polymerization process, resulting in the formation of diverse dark polymers referred to as melanin. In date fruits, approximately 0.0859% of melanin is extracted via chemical treatment using sodium hydroxide.

The brown coloration of melanin in date fruits remains consistent, even in dark varieties such as Ajwa and Safawi, indicating a possible coexistence of melanin and proanthocyanidins in these fruits. Additionally, condensed tannins polymerized with epicatechin have been reported in Tunisian Deglet Nour date varieties.214 Interestingly, Huang et al. (2020)217 reported results about date seed extracts. Unlike date fruits that contained melanin, the seed extracts prevented melanogenesis because of their capability to scavenge reactive oxygen species. Seed extract prevented the inhibitions of the melanocortin 1 receptor, associated transcription factor, tyrosinase, and related protein 1, thereby preventing the onset of melanogenesis in treated cells. This, however, has not been implemented in food systems because it requires extensive clinical trials.

4.4 Lignin

Accumulated evidence from epidemiological data reveals a moderate but significant positive correlation between fruit and vegetable consumption and a reduced risk of mortality and chronic metabolic diseases, such as cancers, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases.176,218 Fruit and vegetable consumption generally improves diet components owing to their richness in micro and macronutrients, including dietary fibers (DF), which provide potential health benefits, such as anti-inflammatory, anticancer, fecal bulkiness, antioxidants, and the production of short-chain fatty acids, in the body.219,220 DFs consist of cellulosic, non-cellulosic, and non-polysaccharide lignin.221 Interestingly, date fruits contain about 6.5–11.5% of DF, with 6–16% of soluble and 84–94% of insoluble fractions. Hemicellulose, lignin, and cellulose are insoluble DF, which improve gut health.222,223 The date palm biomass was reported to consist of 26.4% lignin, 14.8% cellulose, and 30.2% hemicellulose.224

Importantly, among the insoluble DF, lignin has antioxidant properties. Lignin is a complex phytocompound existing between cellulose and hemicellulose, which is widely distributed in the date flesh and synthesized from about 40 monomers, mainly oxygenated phenyl propane (coniferyl, sinapyl, and p-coumaryl alcohols).92,225 Lignin is the second most abundant phytometabolite after cellulose with the potential to produce valuable bioactive compounds,226,227 making lignin an important natural compound with various applications in energy, food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and materials development industries.228

Analytical studies by Hamada et al. (2002)61 revealed that date seeds contain about 65–69% neutral detergent fiber (mannose, rhamnose, glucose, and arabinose), which positively correlates with the presence of a remarkable quantity of lignin.155 A comparative study on different varieties of Tunisian dates also confirmed a range of 19.6–25.4% of lignin present in the date seeds.222 Unlike polyphenols and other bioactive compounds, research into the lignin component and the application of date by-products is still novel and emerging, requiring much attention from the scientific community. Further studies are needed to explore the valorization of this important bioactive compound.

5. Conclusions and future directions

This review delves into date seeds and pomaces as major by-products of date palm processing industries, with a special focus on their techno-functional and bioactive properties, aimed at efficient valorization as food ingredients. Date seeds and pomace, with their secondary metabolites, have demonstrated antioxidant, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, anticancer, reduced cytotoxic, health-promoting prebiotic, and probiotic functionalities. These properties make them a cost-effective alternative, suitable for utilization as functional food ingredients, effectively transforming waste products into economically viable food substrates.

To comprehend the intricate biochemical changes occurring in the food matrix upon the addition of date by-products as functional ingredients, further investigations employing suitable animal models need to be conducted. Additionally, there is a noteworthy research gap concerning the extraction of polysaccharides and melanin from date pomace. Despite the available data, limited in vitro and in vivo exploration of these bioactive-rich components in terms of their health-promoting potential exists, which is crucial for the commercialization of value-added products derived from them.

The strategic utilization of biological wastes like date seeds and pomace, for the extraction of bioactive compounds aligns with sustainable production and utilization practices, fostering the principles of a circular economy. The bioactive components of both seeds and pomace hold significant potential for applications in the food industry. This review asserts that the industrial wealth, particularly seeds and pomace from date processing industries, offers a promising alternative to artificial sources relied upon for the same purpose. Not only does it circumvent potential health and safety hazards associated with artificial additives, but it also helps mitigate the risk of various diseases.

Author contribution

A. Subhash: writing – original Draft. G. Bamigbade: writing – original draft. M. Ayyash: conceptualization, writing – review & editing, supervision.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the United Arab Emirates University and Zayed Center for Health Sciences (UAEU) for providing the PhD students' scholarship (grant number # 12R105).

References

  1. A. T. Idowu, O. O. Igiehon, A. E. Adekoya and S. Idowu, Dates Palm Fruits: A Review of Their Nutritional Components, Bioactivities and Functional Food Applications, AIMS Agric. Food, 2020, 5, 734–755 Search PubMed.
  2. M. Bernstein and N. Munoz, Position of The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics: Food and Nutrition for Older Adults: Promoting Health and Wellness, J. Acad. Nutr. Diet., 2012, 112, 1255–1277 CrossRef PubMed.
  3. C. J. Dillard and J. B. German, Phytochemicals: Nutraceuticals and Human Health, J. Sci. Food Agric., 2000, 80, 1744–1756 CrossRef CAS.
  4. S. Sirisena, K. Ng and S. Ajlouni, The Emerging Australian Date Palm Industry: Date Fruit Nutritional and Bioactive Compounds and Valuable Processing By-Products, Compr. Rev. Food Sci. Food Saf., 2015, 14, 813–823 CrossRef.
  5. N. A. Alsarayrah, E. A. Oma, S. M. Alsanad, H. Arsad, M. M. Abudahash, F. K. ALEnazi and N. D. Alenzi, The Health Values of Phoenix dactylifera (Dates): A review, Emir. J. Food Agric., 2023, 35, 1–16 Search PubMed.
  6. R. A. Al-Alawi, J. H. Al-Mashiqri, J. S. M. Al-Nadabi, B. I. Al-Shihi and Y. Baqi, Date Palm Tree (Phoenix dactylifera L.): Natural Products and Therapeutic Options, Front. Plant Sci., 2017, 8, 845 CrossRef PubMed.
  7. Z. Ashraf and Z. Hamidi-Esfahani, Date and Date Processing: A Review, Food Rev. Int., 2011, 27, 101–133 CrossRef CAS.
  8. N. A. Abdul-Hamid, N. H. Mustaffer, M. Maulidiani, A. Mediani, I. S. Ismail, C. L. Tham, K. Shadid and F. Abas, Quality Evaluation of The Physical Properties, Phytochemicals, Biological Activities and Proximate Analysis of Nine Saudi Date Palm Fruit Varieties, J. Saudi Soc. Agric. Sci., 2020, 19, 151–160 Search PubMed.
  9. I. M. Abu-Reidah, Á. Gil-Izquierdo, S. Medina and F. Ferreres, Phenolic Composition Profiling of Different Edible Parts and By-Products of Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) by using HPLC-DAD-ESI/MS(n), Food Res. Int., 2017, 100, 494–500 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  10. J. Fernández-López, M. Viuda-Martos, E. Sayas-Barberá, C. Navarro-Rodríguez de Vera and J. Á. Pérez-Álvarez, Biological, Nutritive, Functional and Healthy Potential of Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera L.): Current Research and Future Prospects, Agronomy, 2022, 12, 876 CrossRef.
  11. C. T. Chao and R. R. Krueger, The Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.): Overview of Biology, Uses, and Cultivation, HortScience, 2007, 42, 1077–1082 Search PubMed.
  12. I. Amadou, in Nutritional Composition of Fruit Cultivars, ed. M. S. J. Simmonds and V. R. Preedy, Academic Press, San Diego, 2016, pp. 215–233,  DOI:10.1016/B978-0-12-408117-8.00010-6.
  13. A. Al-Baker, The Date Palm: A Review of Its Past and Present Status, and The Recent Advances In Its Culture, Industry and Trade, AL-Ani press, Baghdad-Iraq, 1972 Search PubMed.
  14. J. M. Al-Khayri, S. M. Jain and D. V. Johnson, Date Palm Genetic Resources and Utilization, Springer, 2015 Search PubMed.
  15. M. S. Baliga, B. R. V. Baliga, S. M. Kandathil, H. P. Bhat and P. K. Vayalil, A Review of The Chemistry and Pharmacology of The Date Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera L.), Food Res. Int., 2011, 44, 1812–1822 CrossRef CAS.
  16. W. Marzouk, M. Chaouch, J. Hafsa, D. LeCerf and H. Majdoub, Antioxidant and Antiglycated Activities of Polysaccharides from Tunisian Date Seeds (Phoenix dactilyfera L.), Tunis. J. Chem. Soc., 2017, 19, 124–130 CAS.
  17. M. U. Nasir, S. Hussain, S. Jabbar, F. Rashid, N. Khalid and A. Mehmood, A Review on the Nutritional Content, Functional Properties and Medicinal Potential of Dates, Sci. Lett., 2015, 3, 17–22 Search PubMed.
  18. L. I. El-Juhany, Degradation of Date Palm Trees and Date Production in Arab Countries: Causes and Potential Rehabilitation, Aust. J. Basic Appl. Sci., 2010, 4, 3998–4010 Search PubMed.
  19. N. A. AlFaris, J. Z. AlTamim, L. A. AlMousa, F. A. AlGhamidi and N. A. Albarid, Date-Derived Industries: A Review of Common Products, Manufacturing Methods, and Leading Countries, Emir. J. Food Agric., 2022, 34, 86–97 Search PubMed.
  20. A. Ali, M. Waly, M. Essa and S. Devaranjan, Nutritional and Medicinal Value of Dates Fruits, Dates: Production, Processing, Food, and Medicinal Values, 2012, p. 361 Search PubMed.
  21. N. Echegaray, B. Gullón, M. Pateiro, R. Amarowicz, J. M. Misihairabgwi and J. M. Lorenzo, Date Fruit and Its By-products as Promising Source of Bioactive Components: A Review, Food Rev. Int., 2023, 39, 1411–1432 CrossRef CAS.
  22. M. Tengberg, Beginnings and Early History of Date Palm Garden Cultivation in the Middle East, J. Arid Environ., 2012, 86, 139–147 CrossRef.
  23. A. Mrabet, G. Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, R. Rodríguez-Arcos, R. Guillén-Bejarano, A. Ferchichi, M. Sindic and A. Jiménez-Araujo, Quality Characteristics and Antioxidant Properties of Muffins Enriched with Date Fruit (Phoenix Dactylifera L.) Fiber Concentrates, J. Food Qual., 2016, 39, 237–244 CrossRef CAS.
  24. S. Ghnimi, S. Umer, A. Karim and A. Kamal-Eldin, Date fruit (Phoenix dactylifera L.): An Underutilized Food Seeking Industrial Valorization, NFS J., 2017, 6, 1–10 CrossRef.
  25. FAOSTAT, FAO Statistical Database (FAOSTAT); Food and Agriculture Organization of United Nations, 2022, https://www.fao.org/faostat/es/#data/QCL Search PubMed.
  26. M. A. Farag, A. Otify and M. H. Baky, Phoenix Dactylifera L. Date Fruit By-products Outgoing and Potential Novel Trends of Phytochemical, Nutritive and Medicinal Merits, Food Rev. Int., 2023, 39, 488–510 CrossRef CAS.
  27. Z. Najjar, C. Stathopoulos and S. Chockchaisawasdee, Utilization of Date By-Products in the Food Industry, Emir. J. Food Agric., 2020, 808–815,  DOI:10.9755/ejfa.2020.v32.i11.2192.
  28. Z. Al-Shoaibi, M. A. Al-Mamary, M. A. Al-Habori, A. S. Al-Zubain and S. I. Abdelwahab, In Vivo Antioxidative and Hepatoprotective Effects of Palm Date Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera), Int. J. Pharmacol., 2012, 8, 185–191 Search PubMed.
  29. E. A. R. Assirey, Nutritional Composition of Fruit of 10 Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Cultivars Grown in Saudi Arabia, J. Taibah Univ. Sci., 2015, 9, 75–79 CrossRef.
  30. N. Echegaray, M. Pateiro, B. Gullón, R. Amarowicz, J. M. Misihairabgwi and J. M. Lorenzo, Phoenix dactylifera Products in Human Health – A Review, Trends Food Sci. Technol., 2020, 105, 238–250 CrossRef CAS.
  31. A. El Arem, E. B. Saafi, G. Flamini, M. Issaoui, A. Ferchichi, M. Hammami, A. N. Helall and L. Achour, Volatile and Nonvolatile Chemical Composition of Some Date Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Harvested at Different Stages of Maturity, Int. J. Food Sci. Technol., 2012, 47, 549–555 CrossRef CAS.
  32. M. I. Hussain, M. Farooq and Q. A. Syed, Nutritional and Biological Characteristics of the Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera L.) – A Review, Food Biosci., 2020, 34, 100509 CrossRef CAS.
  33. O. Djaoudene, V. López, G. Cásedas, F. Les, C. Schisano, M. Bachir Bey and G. C. Tenore, Phoenix dactylifera L. Seeds: A By-Product as a Source of Bioactive Compounds with Antioxidant and Enzyme Inhibitory Properties, Food Funct., 2019, 10, 4953–4965 RSC.
  34. A. M. Martín-Sánchez, S. Cherif, J. Ben-Abda, X. Barber-Vallés, J. Á. Pérez-Álvarez and E. Sayas-Barberá, Phytochemicals in Date Co-Products and their Antioxidant Activity, Food Chem., 2014, 158, 513–520 CrossRef PubMed.
  35. E. Sánchez-Zapata, J. Fernández-López, M. Peñaranda, E. Fuentes-Zaragoza, E. Sendra, E. Sayas and J. A. Pérez-Alvarez, Technological Properties of Date Paste Obtained from Date By-Products and Its Effect on the Quality of A Cooked Meat Product, Food Res. Int., 2011, 44, 2401–2407 CrossRef.
  36. S. Maqsood, O. Adiamo, M. Ahmad and P. Mudgil, Bioactive Compounds From Date Fruit and Seed As Potential Nutraceutical and Functional Food Ingredients, Food Chem., 2020, 308, 125522 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  37. C. Muñoz-Bas, N. Muñoz-Tebar, L. Candela-Salvador, J. A. Pérez-Alvarez, J. M. Lorenzo, M. Viuda-Martos and J. Fernández-López, Quality Characteristics of Fresh Date Palm Fruits of “Medjoul” and “Confitera” cv. from the Southeast of Spain (Elche Palm Grove), Foods, 2023, 12, 1–14 CrossRef PubMed.
  38. S. A. Ibrahim, A. A. Ayad, L. L. Williams, R. D. Ayivi, R. Gyawali, A. Krastanov and S. O. Aljaloud, Date Fruit: A Review of The Chemical and Nutritional Compounds, Functional Effects and Food Application in Nutrition Bars for Athletes, Int. J. Food Sci. Technol., 2021, 56, 1503–1513 CrossRef CAS.
  39. P. K. Vayalil, Date Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera Linn): An Emerging Medicinal Food, Crit. Rev. Food Sci. Nutr., 2012, 52, 249–271 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  40. H. Taleb, S. E. Maddocks, R. K. Morris and A. D. Kanekanian, The Antibacterial Activity of Date Syrup Polyphenols against S. aureus and E. coli, Front. Microbiol., 2016, 7, 1–9 Search PubMed.
  41. N. Eid, S. Enani, G. Walton, G. Corona, A. Costabile, G. Gibson, I. Rowland and J. P. Spencer, The Impact of Date Palm Fruits and Their Component Polyphenols, on Gut Microbial Ecology, Bacterial Metabolites and Colon Cancer Cell Proliferation, J. Nutr. Sci., 2014, 3, e46 CrossRef PubMed.
  42. I. Odeh, F. Al-Rimawi, J. Abbadi, L. Obeyat, M. Qabbajeh and A. Hroub, Effect of Harvesting Date and Variety of Date Palm on Antioxidant Capacity, Phenolic and Flavonoid Content of Date Palm (Phoenix Dactylifera), J. Food Nutr. Res., 2014, 2, 499–505 CrossRef.
  43. S. Y. Al-Okbi, Date Palm as Source of Nutraceuticals for Health Promotion: A Review, Curr. Nutr. Rep., 2022, 11, 574–591 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  44. M. Al-Mamary, M. Al-Habori and A. S. Al-Zubairi, The In Vitro Antioxidant Activity of Different Types of Palm Dates (Phoenix dactylifera) Syrups, Arabian J. Chem., 2014, 7, 964–971 CrossRef CAS.
  45. S. Haris, M. Alam, E. Galiwango, M. M. Mohamed, A. Kamal-Eldin and A. H. Al-Marzouqi, Characterization Analysis of Date Fruit Pomace: An Underutilized Waste Bioresource Rich in Dietary Fiber and Phenolic Antioxidants, Waste Manage., 2023, 163, 34–42 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  46. M. Z. Alam, S. Al-Hamimi, M. Ayyash, C. T. Rosa, E. M. Yahia, S. Haris, A. H. Al-Marzouqi and A. Kamal-Eldin, Contributing Factors to Quality of Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Fruit, Sci. Hortic., 2023, 321, 112256 CrossRef CAS.
  47. M. Chandrasekaran and A. H. Bahkali, Valorization of Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera) Fruit Processing By-Products and Wastes Using Bioprocess Technology – Review, Saudi J. Biol. Sci., 2013, 20, 105–120 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  48. I. Akasha, L. Campbell, J. Lonchamp and S. R. Euston, The Major Proteins of The Seed of The Fruit of The Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.): Characterisation and Emulsifying Properties, Food Chem., 2016, 197, 799–806 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  49. L. A. Abdillah and M. Andriani, Friendly Alternative Healthy Drinks through The Use of Date Seeds as Coffee Powder, Proceeding of ICEBM, 2012, pp. 80–87 Search PubMed.
  50. N. Muñoz-Tebar, M. Viuda-Martos, J. M. Lorenzo, J. Fernandez-Lopez and J. A. Perez-Alvarez, Strategies for The Valorization of Date Fruit and Its Co-Products: A New Ingredient in The Development of Value-Added Foods, Foods, 2023, 12, 1–19 CrossRef PubMed.
  51. Z.-X. Tang, L.-E. Shi and S. M. Aleid, Date and Their Processing Byproducts as Substrates for Bioactive Compounds Production, Braz. Arch. Biol. Technol., 2014, 57, 706–713 CrossRef CAS.
  52. A. Golshan Tafti, N. Solaimani Dahdivan and S. Yasini Ardakani, Physicochemical Properties and Applications of Date Seed and Its Oil, Int. Food Res. J., 2017, 24, 1–8 Search PubMed.
  53. M. A. Al-Farsi and C. Y. Lee, Optimization of phenolics and dietary fibre extraction from date seeds, Food Chem., 2008, 108, 977–985 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  54. M. Ranasinghe, I. Manikas, S. Maqsood and C. Stathopoulos, Date Components as Promising Plant-Based Materials to Be Incorporated into Baked Goods—A Review, Sustainability, 2022, 14, 605 CrossRef CAS.
  55. A. Ahmed, M. U. Arshad, F. Saeed, R. S. Ahmed and S. A. S. Chatha, Nutritional Probing and HPLC Profiling of Roasted Date Pit Powder, Pak. J. Nutr., 2016, 15, 229 CrossRef CAS.
  56. I. Nehdi, S. Omri, M. I. Khalil and S. I. Al-Resayes, Characteristics and Chemical Composition of Date Palm (Phoenix canariensis) Seeds and Seed Oil, Ind. Crops Prod., 2010, 32, 360–365 CrossRef CAS.
  57. F. Al Juhaimi, M. M. Özcan, O. Q. Adiamo, O. N. Alsawmahi, K. Ghafoor and E. E. Babiker, Effect of Date Varieties on Physico-Chemical Properties, Fatty Acid Composition, Tocopherol Contents, and Phenolic Compounds of Some Date Seed and Oils, J. Food Process. Preserv., 2018, 42, 1–6 Search PubMed.
  58. A. Thouri, H. Chahdoura, A. El Arem, A. Omri Hichri, R. Ben Hassin and L. Achour, Effect of Solvents Extraction on Phytochemical Components and Biological Activities of Tunisian Date Seeds (var. Korkobbi and Arechti), BMC Complementary Altern. Med., 2017, 17, 248 CrossRef PubMed.
  59. S. Suresh, N. Guizani, M. Al-Ruzeiki, A. Al-Hadhrami, H. Al-Dohani, I. Al-Kindi and M. S. Rahman, Thermal characteristics, chemical composition and polyphenol contents of date-pits powder, J. Food Eng., 2013, 119(3), 668–679 CrossRef CAS.
  60. K. L. Alharbi, J. Raman and H.-J. Shin, Date Fruit and Seed in Nutricosmetics, Cosmetics, 2021, 8, 1–18 CrossRef.
  61. J. S. Hamada, I. B. Hashim and F. A. Sharif, Preliminary Analysis and Potential Uses of Date Pits in Foods, Food Chem., 2002, 76, 135–137 CrossRef CAS.
  62. H. Najib and Y. M. Al-Yousef, in Dates, 2013, pp. 233–260,  DOI:10.1002/9781118292419.ch10.
  63. L. E. Shi, W. Zheng, S. M. Aleid and Z. X. Tang, Date Pits: Chemical Composition, Nutritional and Medicinal Values, Utilization, Crop Sci., 2014, 54, 1322–1330 CrossRef.
  64. S. M. R. Ardekani, M. Khanavi, M. Hajimahmoodi, M. Jahangiri and A. Hadjiakhoondi, Comparison of Antioxidant Activity and Total Phenol Contents of some Date Seed Varieties from Iran, Iran. J. Pharm. Res., 2010, 9, 141–146 Search PubMed.
  65. H. M. Habib, C. Platat, E. Meudec, V. Cheynier and W. H. Ibrahim, Polyphenolic Compounds in Date Fruit Seed (Phoenix dactylifera): Characterisation and Quantification By Using UPLC-DAD-ESI-MS, J. Sci. Food Agric., 2014, 94, 1084–1089 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  66. D. M. Kopustinskiene, V. Jakstas, A. Savickas and J. Bernatoniene, Flavonoids as Anticancer Agents, Nutrients, 2020, 12, 1–25 CrossRef PubMed.
  67. N. Duan, X. Hu, R. Zhou, Y. Li, W. Wu and N. Liu, A Review on Dietary Flavonoids as Modulators of the Tumor Microenvironment, Mol. Nutr. Food Res., 2023, 67, 2200435 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  68. L. G. S. Ponte, I. C. B. Pavan, M. C. S. Mancini, L. G. S. da Silva, A. P. Morelli, M. B. Severino, R. M. N. Bezerra and F. M. Simabuco, The Hallmarks of Flavonoids in Cancer, Molecules, 2021, 26, 1–55 CrossRef PubMed.
  69. D. M. El Sheikh, E. A. El-Kholany and S. M. Kamel, Nutritional Value, Cytotoxicity, Anti-Carcinogenic and Beverage Evaluation of Roasted Date Pits, World J. Dairy Food Sci., 2014, 9, 308–316 Search PubMed.
  70. M. A. Bouaziz, B. Bchir, T. Ben Salah, A. Mokni, H. Ben Hlima, S. Smaoui, H. Attia, S. Besbes and T. Zotta, Use of Endemic Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seeds as an Insoluble Dietary Fiber: Effect on Turkey Meat Quality, J. Food Qual., 2020, 2020, 1–13 CrossRef.
  71. H. Noorbakhsh and M. R. Khorasgani, Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Polysaccharides: A Review on Chemical Structure And Nutritional Properties, J. Food Meas. Char., 2022, 16, 3240–3250 CrossRef.
  72. I. A. Nehdi, H. M. Sbihi, C. P. Tan, U. Rashid and S. I. Al-Resayes, Chemical Composition of Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seed Oil from Six Saudi Arabian Cultivars, J. Food Sci., 2018, 83, 624–630 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  73. M. A. Alkhoori, A. S. Kong, M. N. Aljaafari, A. Abushelaibi, S. H. Erin Lim, W. H. Cheng, C. M. Chong and K. S. Lai, Biochemical Composition and Biological Activities of Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seeds: A Review, Biomolecules, 2022, 12, 1626 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  74. A. Mrabet, A. Jimenez-Araujo, R. Guillen-Bejarano, R. Rodriguez-Arcos and M. Sindic, Date Seeds: A Promising Source of Oil with Functional Properties, Foods, 2020, 9, 787 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  75. A. M. Mazaheri and M. Nikkhah, Production of Citric Acid from Date Pulp by Solid State Fermentation, J. Agric. Sci. Technol., 2002, 4, 119–125 Search PubMed.
  76. A. Molan, A. Yousif and N. Al-Bayati, Total Phenolic Contents and Antiradical Activities of Pomaces and Their Ingredients of Two Iraqi Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Cultivars, World J. Pharm. Pharmaceut. Sci., 2017, 6, 167–180 CAS.
  77. M. Rezazadeh Bari, M. Alizadeh and F. Farbeh, Optimizing Endopectinase Production from Date Pomace by Aspergillus niger PC5 Using Response Surface Methodology, Food Bioprod. Process., 2010, 88, 67–72 CrossRef.
  78. S. Haris, A. Kamal-Eldin, M. M. Ayyash, B. Van der Bruggen, M. M. Mohamed and A. H. Al-Marzouqi, Production of Lactic Acid from Date Fruit Pomace Using Lactobacillus Casei and The Enzyme Cellic Ctec2, Environ. Technol. Innovation, 2023, 31, 103151 CrossRef CAS.
  79. M. Al-Farsi, C. Alasalvar, M. Al-Abid, K. Al-Shoaily, M. Al-Amry and F. Al-Rawahy, Compositional and Functional Characteristics of Dates, Syrups, and Their By-Products, Food Chem., 2007, 104, 943–947 CrossRef CAS.
  80. S. Oladzad, N. Fallah, A. Mahboubi, N. Afsham and M. J. Taherzadeh, Date Fruit Processing Waste and Approaches to Its Valorization: A Review, Bioresour. Technol., 2021, 340, 125625 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  81. A. S. Al-Janah and A. W. Al-Mudhafr, Study of the Composition and Functional Properties of Zahdi Dates Pomace Remains from Date Syrup Industry, Plant Arch., 2021, 21, 109–113 CrossRef.
  82. M. Ayyash, M. Tarique, M. Alaryani, A. Al-Sbiei, R. Masad, B. Al-Saafeen, M. Fernandez-Cabezudo, B. al-Ramadi, J. Kizhakkayil and A. Kamal-Eldin, Bioactive Properties and Untargeted Metabolomics Analysis of Bioaccessible Fractions of Non-Fermented and Fermented Date Fruit Pomace By Novel Yeast Isolates, Food Chem., 2022, 396, 133666 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  83. M. A. Sheir, Innovative Use of Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Press Cake in The Food Industry, Foods Raw Mater., 2022, 10, 2–9 CAS.
  84. S. Y. Cheng, X. Tan, P. L. Show, K. Rambabu, F. Banat, A. Veeramuthu, B. F. Lau, E. P. Ng and T. C. Ling, Incorporating Biowaste into Circular Bioeconomy: A Critical Review of Current Trend and Scaling Up Feasibility, Environ. Technol. Innovation, 2020, 19, 101034 CrossRef.
  85. M. Majzoobi, G. Karambakhsh, M. T. Golmakani, G. R. Mesbahi and A. Farahnaki, Chemical Composition and Functional Properties of Date Press Cake, an Agro-Industrial Waste, J. Agric. Sci. Technol., 2019, 21, 1807–1817 Search PubMed.
  86. Y. A. Al-Dashti, R. R. Holt, C. L. Keen and R. M. Hackman, Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera): Effects on Vascular Health and Future Research Directions, Int. J. Mol. Sci., 2021, 22, 4665 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  87. N. Eid, H. Osmanova, C. Natchez, G. Walton, A. Costabile, G. Gibson, I. Rowland and J. P. Spencer, Impact of Palm Date Consumption on Microbiota Growth and Large Intestinal Health: A Randomised, Controlled, Cross-Over, Human Intervention Study, Br. J. Nutr., 2015, 114, 1226–1236 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  88. M. V. Rangaraj, K. Rambabu, F. Banat and V. Mittal, Natural Antioxidants-Based Edible Active Food Packaging: An Overview of Current Advancements, Food Biosci., 2021, 43, 101251 CrossRef.
  89. H. Al-Hamdani, The Effect of Eating Date Pomace on Increasing Hemoglobin Levels in A Sample of Women, Plant Arch., 2019, 19, 1427–1433 Search PubMed.
  90. S. Plazzotta, L. Manzocco and M. C. Nicoli, Fruit And Vegetable Waste Management And The Challenge Of Fresh-Cut Salad, Trends Food Sci. Technol., 2017, 63, 51–59 CrossRef CAS.
  91. C. Y. Cheok, N. Mohd Adzahan, R. Abdul Rahman, N. H. Zainal Abedin, N. Hussain, R. Sulaiman and G. H. Chong, Current Trends of Tropical Fruit Waste Utilization, Crit. Rev. Food Sci. Nutr., 2018, 58, 335–361 Search PubMed.
  92. N. George, A. A. M. Andersson, R. Andersson and A. Kamal-Eldin, Lignin is The Main Determinant Of Total Dietary Fiber Differences between Date Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Varieties, NFS J., 2020, 21, 16–21 CrossRef.
  93. A. Kamal-Eldin, N. George, B. Sobti, N. AlRashidi, S. Ghnimi, A. A. Ali, A. A. M. Andersson, R. Andersson, A. Antony and F. Hamed, Dietary Fiber Components, Microstructure, and Texture of Date Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera, L.), Sci. Rep., 2020, 10, 21767 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  94. Z. Heidarinejad, O. Rahmanian, M. Fazlzadeh and M. Heidari, Enhancement of Methylene Blue Adsorption onto Activated Carbon Prepared from Date Press Cake by Low Frequency Ultrasound, J. Mol. Liq., 2018, 264, 591–599 CrossRef CAS.
  95. W. Zhou, Y. Hui, I. De Leyn, M. Pagani, C. Rosell, J. Selman and N. Therdthai, Bakery Products Science and Technology, 2014 Search PubMed.
  96. J. Bajerska, S. Mildner-Szkudlarz, P. Górnaś and D. Seglina, The Effects of Muffins Enriched with Sour Cherry Pomace on Acceptability, Glycemic Response, Satiety and Energy Intake: A Randomized Crossover Trial, J. Sci. Food Agric., 2016, 96, 2486–2493 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  97. S. Moser, J. Lim, M. Chegeni, J. D. Wightman, B. R. Hamaker and M. G. Ferruzzi, Concord and Niagara Grape Juice and Their Phenolics Modify Intestinal Glucose Transport in a Coupled in Vitro Digestion/Caco-2 Human Intestinal Model, Nutrients, 2016, 8, 414 CrossRef PubMed.
  98. S. Coe and L. Ryan, Impact of Polyphenol-Rich Sources on Acute Postprandial Glycaemia: A Systematic Review, J. Nutr. Sci., 2016, 5, e24 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  99. P. Naknaen, T. Itthisoponkul, A. Sondee and N. Angsombat, Utilization of Watermelon Rind Waste as A Potential Source of Dietary Fiber to Improve Health Promoting Properties and Reduce Glycemic Index for Cookie Making, Food Sci. Biotechnol., 2016, 25, 415–424 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  100. B. Bchir, H. N. Rabetafika, M. Paquot and C. Blecker, Effect of Pear, Apple and Date Fibres from Cooked Fruit By-products on Dough Performance and Bread Quality, Food Bioprocess Technol., 2014, 7, 1114–1127 CrossRef CAS.
  101. E. Nwanekezi, C. Ekwe and R. Agbugba, Effect of Substitution of Sucrose with Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera) Fruit on Quality of Bread, J. Food Process. Technol., 2015, 6, 1000484 Search PubMed.
  102. P. A. Conforti, D. K. Yamul and C. E. Lupano, Influence of Milk, Corn Starch, and Baking Conditions on the Starch Digestibility, Gelatinization, and Fracture Stress of Biscuits, Cereal Chem., 2012, 89, 205–210 CrossRef CAS.
  103. M. S. I. Saleh, H. A. El-Mansy, H. E. Bahlol, M. H. Mohamed and M. M. M. Doweidar, Quality Characteristics of Biscuits Supplemented With Pomace of Pomegranate Seed and Residual of Date Press, Ann. Agric. Sci. Moshtohor, 2022, 60, 855–868 CrossRef.
  104. A. Kumar, K. Elavarasan, M. D. Hanjabam, P. K. Binsi, C. O. Mohan, A. A. Zynudheen and A. Kumar K, Marine Collagen Peptide as A Fortificant for Biscuit: Effects on Biscuit Attributes, LWT–Food Sci. Technol., 2019, 109, 450–456 CrossRef CAS.
  105. R. Yamsaengsung, E. Berghofer and R. Schoenlechner, Physical Properties and Sensory Acceptability of Cookies Made from Chickpea Addition to White Wheat or Whole Wheat Flour Compared to Gluten-Free Amaranth or Buckwheat Flour, Int. J. Food Sci. Technol., 2012, 47, 2221–2227 CrossRef CAS.
  106. M. Hanan, Quality Characteristics of Cantaloupe Seed Oil and Cookies Substituted With Ground Full Fat and Defatted Seeds, J. Appl. Sci. Res., 2013, 9, 435–443 Search PubMed.
  107. P. A. Ikechukwu, D. Okafor, N. Kabuo, J. Ibeabuchi, E. Odimegwu, S. Alagbaoso, N. Njideka and R. Mbah, Production and Evaluation of Cookies from Whole Wheat and Date Palm Fruit Pulp as Sugar Substitute, Int. J. Adv. Eng. Technol. Manag. Appl. Sci., 2017, 4, 1–31 Search PubMed.
  108. C. Ajibola, V. Oyerinde and O. Adeniyan, Physicochemical and Antioxidant Properties of Whole-Wheat Biscuits Incorporated with Moringa Oleifera Leaves and Cocoa Powder, J. Sci. Res. Rep., 2015, 7, 195–206 Search PubMed.
  109. R. Lucas-González, M. Viuda-Martos, J. Á. Pérez-Álvarez, C. Chaves-López, B. Shkembi, S. Moscaritolo, J. Fernández-López and G. Sacchetti, Correction to: Persimmon Flours as Functional Ingredients in Spaghetti: Chemical, Physico-Chemical and Cooking Quality, J. Food Meas. Char., 2020, 14, 1645 CrossRef.
  110. B. Bchir, R. Karoui, S. Danthine, C. Blecker, S. Besbes and H. Attia, Date, Apple, and Pear By-Products as Functional Ingredients in Pasta: Cooking Quality Attributes and Physicochemical, Rheological, and Sensorial Properties, Foods, 2022, 11, 1393 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  111. B. Biró, R. Fodor, I. Szedljak, K. Pásztor-Huszár and A. Gere, Buckwheat-Pasta Enriched with Silkworm Powder: Technological Analysis and Sensory Evaluation, LWT, 2019, 116, 108542 CrossRef.
  112. L. Minarovičová, M. Lauková, Z. Kohajdová, J. Karovičová and V. Kuchtová, Effect of Pumpkin Powder Incorporation on Cooking and Sensory Parameters of Pasta, Potravinarstvo Slovak J. Food Sci., 2017, 11, 373–379 CrossRef PubMed.
  113. A. R. Abdel-Moemin, Analysis of Phenolic Acids and Anthocyanins of Pasta-Like Product Enriched with Date Kernels (Phoenix dactylifera L.) and Purple Carrots (Daucus carota L. sp. sativus var. atrorubens), J. Food Meas. Char., 2016, 10, 507–519 CrossRef.
  114. M. Hamdia, Effect of Supplementation of Yoghurt with Syrup of Date Palm Pomace on Quality Properties Products, Adv. Life Sci. Technol., 2016, 41, 1–7 Search PubMed.
  115. M. Jridi, N. Souissi, M. B. Salem, M. A. Ayadi, M. Nasri and S. Azabou, Tunisian Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) By-Products: Characterization and Potential Effects on Sensory, Textural and Antioxidant Properties of Dairy Desserts, Food Chem., 2015, 188, 8–15 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  116. E. Sayas-Barberá, A. M. Martín-Sánchez, S. Cherif, J. Ben-Abda and J. Pérez-Álvarez, Effect of Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Pits on the Shelf Life of Beef Burgers, Foods, 2020, 9, 104 CrossRef PubMed.
  117. S. E. Hosseini, N. Hashemian, M. M. A. Boujar and G. Asadi, Effect of Use of Date Processing By-Product on Some Physico-Chemical and Sensory Properties of Sausage, Proceedings of the Scientific Papers: Series D, Animal Science-The International Session of Scientific Communications of the Faculty of Animal Science, 2014, vol. 57, pp. 237–240 Search PubMed.
  118. M. A. Afiq, R. A. Rahman, Y. C. Man, H. Al-Kahtani and T. S. T. Mansor, Date Seed and Date Seed Oil, Int. Food Res. J., 2013, 20, 2035 Search PubMed.
  119. M. B. H. Najafi, Date Seeds: A Novel and Inexpensive Source of Dietary Fiber, Proceedings of the 2011 International Conference on Food Engineering and Biotechnology, IACSIT Press, Singapoore, 2011, vol. 9, pp. 323–326 Search PubMed.
  120. M. A. Al-Farsi and C. Y. Lee, Usage of Date (Phoenix Dactylifera L.) Seeds in Human Health and Animal Feed, in Nuts and Seeds in Health and Disease Prevention, Academic Press, 2011, pp. 447–452 Search PubMed.
  121. S. Hejri-Zarifi, Z. Ahmadian-Kouchaksaraei, A. Pourfarzad and M. H. Khodaparast, Dough Performance, Quality and Shelf Life of Flat Bread Supplemented with Fractions of Germinated Date Seed, J. Food Sci. Technol., 2014, 51, 3776–3784 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  122. N. Tariq, D. J. Jenkins, E. Vidgen, N. Fleshner, C. W. Kendall, J. A. Story, W. Singer, M. D'Costa and N. Struthers, Effect of Soluble and Insoluble Fiber Diets on Serum Prostate Specific Antigen in Men, J. Urol., 2000, 163, 114–118 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  123. S. Ötles and S. Ozgoz, Health Effects of Dietary Fiber, Acta Sci. Pol., Technol. Aliment., 2014, 13, 191–202 CrossRef.
  124. S. A. Ayatollahi, Antidiabetic Activity of Date Seed Methanolic Extracts in Alloxan-Induced Diabetic Rats, Pak. Vet. J., 2019, 39, 583–587 CrossRef CAS.
  125. G. Gökşen, Ö. Durkan, S. Sayar and H. i. Ekiz, Potential of Date Seeds as A Functional Food Components, J. Food Meas. Char., 2018, 12, 1904–1909 CrossRef.
  126. A. I. Attia, F. M. Reda, A. K. Patra, S. S. Elnesr, Y. A. Attia and M. Alagawany, Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) by-Products: Chemical Composition, Nutritive Value and Applications in Poultry Nutrition, an Updating Review, Animals, 2021, 11, 1133 CrossRef PubMed.
  127. L. F. Pinto, M. P. S. d. Freitas and A. W. S. A. d. Figueiredo, Sistemas Nacionais de Informação e levantamentos populacionais: algumas contribuições do Ministério da Saúde e do IBGE para a análise das capitais brasileiras nos últimos 30 anos, Ciência & Saúde Coletiva, 2018, vol. 23 Search PubMed.
  128. A. Z. Barakat, A. R. Hamed, R. I. Bassuiny, A. M. Abdel-Aty and S. A. Mohamed, Date Palm and Saw Palmetto Seeds Functional Properties: Antioxidant, Anti-Inflammatory and Antimicrobial Activities, J. Food Meas. Char., 2020, 14, 1064–1072 CrossRef.
  129. A. R. Soares Mateus, A. Pena, R. Sendón, C. Almeida, G. A. Nieto, K. Khwaldia and A. Sanches Silva, By-Products of Dates, Cherries, Plums and Artichokes: A Source of Valuable Bioactive Compounds, Trends Food Sci. Technol., 2023, 131, 220–243 CrossRef CAS.
  130. E. d. T. Bouhlali, C. Alem, J. Ennassir, M. Benlyas, A. N. Mbark and Y. F. Zegzouti, Phytochemical Compositions and Antioxidant Capacity of Three Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seeds Varieties Grown in the South East Morocco, J. Saudi Soc. Agric. Sci., 2017, 16, 350–357 Search PubMed.
  131. S. A. Jassim and M. A. Naji, In vitro Evaluation of the Antiviral Activity of an Extract of Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Pits on a Pseudomonas Phage, J. Evidence-Based Complementary Altern. Med., 2010, 7, 57–62 CrossRef PubMed.
  132. F. Bouaziz, A. Ben Abdeddayem, M. Koubaa, R. Ellouz Ghorbel and S. Ellouz Chaabouni, Date Seeds as a Natural Source of Dietary Fibers to Improve Texture and Sensory Properties of Wheat Bread, Foods, 2020, 9, 737 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  133. Z. Najjar, J. Kizhakkayil, H. Shakoor, C. Platat, C. Stathopoulos and M. Ranasinghe, Antioxidant Potential of Cookies Formulated with Date Seed Powder, Foods, 2022, 11, 448 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  134. M. Al-Khalili, N. Al-Habsi and M. S. Rahman, Applications of Date Pits in Foods to Enhance Their Functionality and Quality: A Review, Front. Sustainable Food Syst., 2023, 6, 1101043 CrossRef.
  135. A. A. E.-N. Amin, A. F. A. K. Abdel Fattah and S. F. El-Sharabasy, Quality Attributes of Cookies Fortified With Date Powder, Arab. Univ. J. Agric. Sci., 2019, 27, 2539–2547 Search PubMed.
  136. M. S. Halaby, Potential Effect of Date Pits Fortified Bread on Diabetic Rats, Int. J. Nutr. Food Sci., 2014, 3, 49–59 CrossRef.
  137. F. Shokrollahi and M. Taghizadeh, Date Seed as A New Source of Dietary Fiber: Physicochemical and Baking Properties, Int. Food Res. J., 2016, 23, 1–7 Search PubMed.
  138. T. Ragab and N. Yossef, A Comparative Study between Different Additives for Date Pits Coffee Beverage: Health and Nutritional Evaluation, Egypt. J. Chem., 2019, 777–790 Search PubMed.
  139. S. M. Gesteira, R. L. Oliveira, J. D. S. Trajano, C. V. D. M. Ribeiro, E. I. D. S. Costa, R. D. X. Ribeiro, E. S. Pereira and L. R. Bezerra, Fatty Acid Profile, Physicochemical Composition and Sensorial Attributes of Salted and Sun-Dried Meat from Young Nellore Bulls Supplemented with Condensed Tannins, PLoS One, 2019, 14, e0216047 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  140. M. Nor, W. Wan Salahuddin, J. Liew, M. Rahman, T. Abu Bakar, S. Appalasamy, E. Aweng, I. Abdul Halim, N. Saidan and M. Rosdi, Valorisation of Date Seed Powder (Phoenix dactylifera L.) for Tenderizing Properties of Different Types of Meat, Food Res., 2022, 6, 106–113 Search PubMed.
  141. H. Abdelrahman, A. Ahmed and M. Rana, Exploiting Egyptian Dates Waste Extract as a Preservative to Improve the Quality and Safety of Chilled Chickens, Food Res., 2022, 6, 277–285 Search PubMed.
  142. R. Essa and E. Elsebaie, Effect of Using Date Pits Powder as a Fat Replacer and Anti-Oxidative Agent on Beef Burger Quality, J. Food Dairy Sci., 2018, 9, 91–96 CrossRef.
  143. B. s. Abdel-Maksoud, M. A. E.-M. El-Waseif, H. m. Fahmy, E. I. Abd-Elazim and H. A.-G. Shaaban, Study Effect of Addition Date Seeds Powder on Quality Criteria and Antioxidant properties of Beef Meatballs, Egypt. J. Chem., 2022, 65, 627–640 Search PubMed.
  144. R. Briones, L. Serrano, R. B. Younes, I. Mondragon and J. Labidi, Polyol Production by Chemical Modification of Date Seeds, Ind. Crops Prod., 2011, 34, 1035–1040 CrossRef CAS.
  145. A. M. M. Basuny and M. A. Al-Marzooq, Production of mayonnaise from date pit oil, Food Nutr. Sci., 2011, 2, 938–943 CAS.
  146. N. K. Alqahtani, T. M. Alnemr, A. M. Alqattan, S. M. Aleid and H. M. Habib, Physicochemical and Sensory Properties and Shelf Life of Block-Type Processed Cheeses Fortified with Date Seeds (Phoenix dactylifera L.) as a Functional Food, Foods, 2023, 12, 679 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  147. Z. Jrad, O. Oussaief, H. El-Hatmi and M. A. Bouaziz, Fortification of Goat Yogurt with Roasted Date Seeds (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Powder: Impact on Nutritional, Technological, Phenolic Profile, Antioxidant and Sensory Properties, J. Food Meas. Char., 2022, 16, 4675–4686 CrossRef.
  148. N. Bentrad and A. Hamida-Ferhat, Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera): Nutritional Values and Potential Benefits on Health, in The Mediterranean Diet (Second Edition), ed. V. R. Preedy and R. R. Watson, Academic Press, 2020, pp. 239–255,  DOI:10.1016/B978-0-12-818649-7.00022-9.
  149. A. Chaari, B. Abdellatif, F. Nabi and R. H. Khan, Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Fruit's Polyphenols as Potential Inhibitors for Human Amylin Fibril Formation and Toxicity in Type 2 Diabetes, Int. J. Biol. Macromol., 2020, 164, 1794–1808 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  150. R. M. Hathout, S. H. El-Ahmady and A. A. Metwally, Curcumin or Bisdemethoxycurcumin for Nose-to-Brain Treatment of Alzheimer Disease? A Bio/Chemo-Informatics Case Study, Nat. Prod. Res., 2018, 32, 2873–2881 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  151. Z. Pakkish and S. Mohammadrezakhani, Comparison of Phytochemicals and their Antioxidant Activity in Seven Date Palm Varieties Grown in Iran, Int. J. Food Prop., 2020, 23, 1766–1776 CrossRef CAS.
  152. A. Younas, S. A. Naqvi, M. R. Khan, M. A. Shabbir, M. A. Jatoi, F. Anwar, M. Inam-Ur-Raheem, N. Saari and R. M. Aadil, Functional Food and Nutra-Pharmaceutical Perspectives of Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Fruit, J. Food Biochem., 2020, 44, e13332 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  153. K. Ghafoor, M. Z. I. Sarker, F. Y. Al-Juhaimi, E. E. Babiker, M. S. Alkaltham and A. K. Almubarak, Extraction and Evaluation of Bioactive Compounds from Date (Phoenix dactylifera) Seed Using Supercritical and Subcritical CO2 Techniques, Foods, 2022, 11, 1806 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  154. S. Allaqaband, A. H. Dar, U. Patel, N. Kumar, G. A. Nayik, S. A. Khan, M. J. Ansari, N. M. Alabdallah, P. Kumar, V. K. Pandey, B. Kovács and A. M. Shaikh, Utilization of Fruit Seed-Based Bioactive Compounds for Formulating the Nutraceuticals and Functional Food: A Review, Front. Nutr., 2022, 9, 902554 CrossRef PubMed.
  155. A. Mrabet, H. Hammadi, G. Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, A. Jiménez-Araujo and M. Sindic, Date Palm Fruits as a Potential Source of Functional Dietary Fiber: A Review, Food Sci. Technol. Res., 2019, 25, 1–10 CrossRef CAS.
  156. A. Benchelah and M. Maka, Les Dattes, de la pr histoire nos jours, Phytotherapie, 2006, 4, 43–47 CrossRef.
  157. M. Al-Farsi, C. Alasalvar, A. Morris, M. Baron and F. Shahidi, Comparison of Antioxidant Activity, Anthocyanins, Carotenoids, and Phenolics of Three Native Fresh and Sun-Dried Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Varieties Grown in Oman, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2005, 53, 7592–7599 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  158. M. H. Matloob and A. A. A.-H. Balakita, Phenolic Content of Various Date Palms Fruits and Vinegars from Iraq, Int. J. Chem. Sci., 2016, 14, 1893–1906 CAS.
  159. R. Kiani, A. Arzani and S. A. M. Mirmohammady Maibody, Polyphenols, Flavonoids, and Antioxidant Activity Involved in Salt Tolerance in Wheat, Aegilops cylindrica and Their Amphidiploids, Front. Plant Sci., 2021, 12, 646221 CrossRef PubMed.
  160. B. Tohidi, M. Rahimmalek and A. Arzani, Essential Oil Composition, Total Phenolic, Flavonoid Contents, and Antioxidant Activity of Thymus Species Collected from Different Regions of Iran, Food Chem., 2017, 220, 153–161 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  161. Y. J. Hong, F. A. Tomas-Barberan, A. A. Kader and A. E. Mitchell, The Flavonoid, Glycosides and Procyanidin Composition of Deglet Noor Dates (Phoenix dactylifera), J. Agric. Food Chem., 2006, 54, 2405–2411 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  162. C. Platat, H. M. Habib, I. B. Hashim, H. Kamal, F. AlMaqbali, U. Souka and W. H. Ibrahim, Production of Functional Pita Bread Using Date Seed Powder, J. Food Sci. Technol., 2015, 52, 6375–6384 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  163. W. Kchaou, F. Abbès, R. B. Mansour, C. Blecker, H. Attia and S. Besbes, Phenolic Profile, Antibacterial and Cytotoxic Properties of Second Grade Date Extract from Tunisian Cultivars (Phoenix dactylifera L.), Food Chem., 2016, 194, 1048–1055 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  164. A. Kirakosyan, E. Seymour, P. B. Kaufman, S. Warber, S. Bolling and S. C. Chang, Antioxidant Capacity of Polyphenolic Extracts from Leaves of Crataegus laevigata and Crataegus monogyna (Hawthorn) Subjected to Drought and Cold Stress, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2003, 51, 3973–3976 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  165. I. Hamad, H. AbdElgawad, S. Al Jaouni, G. Zinta, H. Asard, S. Hassan, M. Hegab, N. Hagagy and S. Selim, Metabolic Analysis of Various Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Cultivars from Saudi Arabia to Assess Their Nutritional Quality, Molecules, 2015, 20, 13620–13641 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  166. E. A. Saleh, M. S. Tawfik and H. M. Abu-Tarboush, Phenolic Contents and Antioxidant Activity of Various Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Fruits from Saudi Arabia, Food Nutr. Sci., 2011, 2, 1134–1141 CAS.
  167. X. Wu, G. R. Beecher, J. M. Holden, D. B. Haytowitz, S. E. Gebhardt and R. L. Prior, Lipophilic and Hydrophilic Antioxidant Capacities of Common Foods in the United States, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2004, 52, 4026–4037 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  168. M. Saleh, L. Amro, H. Barakat, R. Baker, A. A. Reyash, R. Amro and J. Qasem, Fruit By-Product Processing and Bioactive Compounds, J. Food Qual., 2021, 2021, 5513358 CrossRef.
  169. S. G. Rudra, J. Nishad, N. Jakhar and C. Kaur, Food industry waste: mine of nutraceuticals, Int. J. Environ. Sci. Technol., 2015, 4, 205–229 Search PubMed.
  170. D. Atmani, N. Chaher, M. Berboucha, K. Ayouni, H. Lounis, H. Boudaoud, N. Debbache and D. Atmani, Antioxidant Capacity and Phenol Content of Selected Algerian Medicinal Plants, Food Chem., 2009, 112, 303–309 CrossRef CAS.
  171. S. Khalid, A. Ahmad, T. Masud and M. Asad, Evaluation of Phenolic Content and Antioxidant Activity of Pits and Flesh of date Vairities, J. Anim. Plant Sci., 2021, 31, 1174–1179 CAS.
  172. S. Sirisena, S. Ajlouni and K. Ng, Simulated Gastrointestinal Digestion and In Vitro Colonic Fermentation of Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seed Polyphenols, Int. J. Food Sci. Technol., 2018, 53, 412–422 CrossRef CAS.
  173. S. Hilary, J. Kizhakkayil, U. Souka, F. Al-Meqbaali, W. Ibrahim and C. Platat, In-Vitro Investigation of Polyphenol-Rich Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seed Extract Bioactivity, Front. Nutr., 2021, 8, 667514 CrossRef PubMed.
  174. F. Khallouki, I. Ricarte, A. Breuer and R. W. Owen, Characterization of Phenolic Compounds in Mature Moroccan Medjool Date Palm Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera) by HPLC-DAD-ESI-MS, J. Food Compos. Anal., 2018, 70, 63–71 CrossRef CAS.
  175. C. Guo, J. Yang, J. Wei, Y. Li, J. Xu and Y. Jiang, Antioxidant Activities of Peel, Pulp and Seed Fractions of Common Fruits as Determined by FRAP Assay, Nutr. Res., 2003, 23, 1719–1726 CrossRef CAS.
  176. C.-R. Zhang, S. A. Aldosari, P. S. P. V. Vidyasagar, P. Shukla and M. G. Nair, Health-Benefits of Date Fruits Produced in Saudi Arabia Based on In Vitro Antioxidant, Anti-Inflammatory and Human Tumor Cell Proliferation Inhibitory Assays, J. Saudi Soc. Agric. Sci., 2017, 16, 287–293 Search PubMed.
  177. M. S. Arshad, S. M. Batool, M. K. Khan, M. Imran, M. H. Ahmad, F. M. Anjum and S. Hussain, Bio-Evaluation of Functional Date Bars Using Rats as Model Organism against Hypercholesterolemia, Lipids Health Dis., 2019, 18, 148 CrossRef PubMed.
  178. R. J. Nijveldt, E. van Nood, D. E. van Hoorn, P. G. Boelens, K. van Norren and P. A. van Leeuwen, Flavonoids: A Review of Probable Mechanisms of Action and Potential Applications, Am. J. Clin. Nutr., 2001, 74, 418–425 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  179. C. Counet and S. Collin, Effect of the Number of Flavanol Units on the Antioxidant Activity of Procyanidin Fractions Isolated from Chocolate, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2003, 51, 6816–6822 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  180. S. B. Lotito and B. Frei, Consumption of Flavonoid-Rich Foods and Increased Plasma Antioxidant Capacity in Humans: Cause, Consequence, Or Epiphenomenon?, Free Radicals Biol. Med., 2006, 41, 1727–1746 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  181. A. Mansouri, G. Embarek, E. Kokkalou and P. Kefalas, Phenolic Profile and Antioxidant Activity of The Algerian Ripe Date Palm Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera), Food Chem., 2005, 89, 411–420 CrossRef CAS.
  182. M. Majzoobi, G. Karambakhsh, M. T. Golmakani, G. Mesbahi and A. Farahnaky, Effects of Level and Particle Size of Date Fruit Press Cake on Batter Rheological Properties and Physical and Nutritional Properties of Cake, J. Agric. Sci. Technol., 2020, 22, 121–133 Search PubMed.
  183. H. M. Habib and W. H. Ibrahim, Effect of Date Seeds on Oxidative Damage and Antioxidant Status In Vivo, J. Sci. Food Agric., 2011, 91, 1674–1679 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  184. D. H. A. Abdelaziz and S. A. Ali, The Protective Effect of Phoenix dactylifera L. Seeds against CCl4-Induced Hepatotoxicity in Rats, J. Ethnopharmacol., 2014, 155, 736–743 CrossRef PubMed.
  185. C. Platat, S. Hilary, F. A. Tomas-Barberan, J. A. Martinez-Blazquez, F. Al-Meqbali, U. Souka, S. Al-Hammadi and W. Ibrahim, Urine Metabolites and Antioxidant Effect after Oral Intake of Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seeds-Based Products (Powder, Bread and Extract) by Human, Nutrients, 2019, 11, 2489 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  186. S. Al-Daihan and R. S. Bhat, Antibacterial Activities of Extracts of Leaf, Fruit, Seed and Bark of Phoenix dactylifera, Afr. J. Biotechnol., 2012, 11, 10021–10025 Search PubMed.
  187. M. A. Samad, S. H. Hashim, K. Simarani and J. S. Yaacob, Antibacterial Properties and Effects of Fruit Chilling and Extract Storage on Antioxidant Activity, Total Phenolic and Anthocyanin Content of Four Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera) Cultivars, Molecules, 2016, 21, 419 CrossRef PubMed.
  188. N. D. Yuliana, M. Z. Tuarita, A. Khatib, F. Laila and S. Sukarno, GC–MS Metabolomics Revealed Protocatechuic Acid as A Cytotoxic and Apoptosis-Inducing Compound from Black Rice Brans, Food Sci. Biotechnol., 2020, 29, 825–835 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  189. R. Kumar, G. Deep, M. F. Wempe, J. Surek, A. Kumar, R. Agarwal and C. Agarwal, Procyanidin B2 3,3′′-Di-O-Gallate induces Oxidative Stress-Mediated Cell Death in Prostate Cancer Cells Via Inhibiting MAP Kinase Phosphatase Activity and Activating ERK1/2 and AMPK, Mol. Carcinog., 2018, 57, 57–69 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  190. N. Al-Zubaidy, A. Al-Zubaidy and H. Sahib, The Anti-Proliferative Activity of phoenix dactylifera Seed Extract on MCF-7 Breast Cancer Cell Line, Int. J. Pharm. Sci. Rev. Res., 2016, 41, 358–362 CAS.
  191. N. Malviya, S. Jain and S. Malviya, Antidiabetic Potential of Medicinal Plants, Acta Pol. Pharm., 2010, 67, 113–118 Search PubMed.
  192. C.-R. Zhang, S. A. Aldosari, P. S. P. V. Vidyasagar, K. M. Nair and M. G. Nair, Antioxidant and Anti-inflammatory Assays Confirm Bioactive Compounds in Ajwa Date Fruit, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2013, 61, 5834–5840 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  193. M. Hasan and A. Mohieldein, In Vivo Evaluation of Anti Diabetic, Hypolipidemic, Antioxidative Activities of Saudi Date Seed Extract on Streptozotocin Induced Diabetic Rats, J. Clin. Diagn. Res., 2016, 10, Ff06–Ff12 CAS.
  194. S. H. Orabi and S. M. Shawky, Effect of Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera) Seeds Extracts on Hematological, Biochemical Parameters and Some Fertility Indices in Male Rats, Int. J. Sci.: Basic Appl. Res., 2014, 17, 137–147 Search PubMed.
  195. S. Amany Alsayed, I. Naglaa Mohamed and M. Mervat Mostafa, Using Date Seed Powder Nanoparticles and Infusion as a Sustainable Source of Nutraceuticals, J. Food Nutr. Sci., 2019, 7, 39–48 Search PubMed.
  196. A. A. Al-Qarawi, H. M. Mousa, B. Ali, H. Abdel-Rahman and S. A. El-Mougy, Protective Effect of Extracts from Dates (Phoenix dactylifera L.) on Carbon Tetrachloride-Induced Hepatotoxicity in Rats, Int. J. Appl. Res. Vet. Med., 2004, 2, 176–180 Search PubMed.
  197. A. S. A. Mohammed, M. Naveed and N. Jost, Polysaccharides; Classification, Chemical Properties, and Future Perspective Applications in Fields of Pharmacology and Biological Medicine (A Review of Current Applications and Upcoming Potentialities), J. Polym. Environ., 2021, 29, 2359–2371 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  198. C. Gao, C. Cai, J. Liu, Y. Wang, Y. Chen, L. Wang and Z. Tan, Extraction and Preliminary Purification of Polysaccharides from Camellia oleifera Abel. Seed Cake Using A Thermoseparating Aqueous Two-Phase System Based On EOPO Copolymer and Deep Eutectic Solvents, Food Chem., 2020, 313, 126164 CrossRef PubMed.
  199. R. R. Zhou, J. H. Huang, D. He, Z. Y. Yi, D. Zhao, Z. Liu, S. H. Zhang and L. Q. Huang, Green and Efficient Extraction of Polysaccharide and Ginsenoside from American Ginseng (Panax quinquefolius L.) by Deep Eutectic Solvent Extraction and Aqueous Two-Phase System, Molecules, 2022, 27, 3132 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  200. A. Bendahou, A. Dufresne, H. Kaddami and Y. Habibi, Isolation and Structural Characterization of Hemicelluloses from Palm of Phoenix dactylifera L, Carbohydr. Polym., 2007, 68, 601–608 CrossRef CAS.
  201. M. Khatib, A. Al-Tamimi, L. Cecchi, A. Adessi, M. Innocenti, D. Balli and N. Mulinacci, Phenolic Compounds and Polysaccharides in yhe Date Fruit (Phoenix dactylifera L.): Comparative Study on Five Widely Consumed Arabian Varieties, Food Chem., 2022, 395, 133591 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  202. M. Shafiei, K. Karimi and M. J. Taherzadeh, Palm Date Fibers: Analysis and Enzymatic Hydrolysis, Int. J. Mol. Sci., 2010, 11, 4285–4296 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  203. H. Noorbakhsh and R. M. Khorasgani, Functional and Chemical Properties of Phoenix dactylifera L. Polysaccharides and the Effect of Date Flesh and Seed Intervention on Some Blood Biomarkers: A Contrastive Analysis, Food Chem.: X, 2023, 19, 100834 CAS.
  204. O. Ishurd, Y. Ali, W. Wei, F. Bashir, A. Ali, A. Ashour and Y. Pan, An Alkali-Soluble Heteroxylan from Seeds of Phoenix dactylifera L, Carbohydr. Res., 2003, 338, 1609–1612 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  205. O. Ishrud, M. Zahid, H. Zhou and Y. Pan, A Water-Soluble Galactomannan from the Seeds of Phoenix dactylifera L, Carbohydr. Res., 2001, 335, 297–301 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  206. O. Ishurd and J. F. Kennedy, The Anti-Cancer Activity of Polysaccharide Prepared from Libyan Dates (Phoenix dactylifera L.), Carbohydr. Polym., 2005, 59, 531–535 CrossRef CAS.
  207. M. Dhahri, S. Sioud, S. Alsuhaymi, F. Almulhim, A. Haneef, A. Saoudi, M. Jaremko and A.-H. M. Emwas, Extraction, Characterization, and Antioxidant Activity of Polysaccharides from Ajwa Seed and Flesh, Separations, 2023, 10, 103 CrossRef CAS.
  208. K. N. Kurian and G. Bhat, Sarita, Protoprotection and Anti-inflammatory Properties of Non–cytotoxic Melanin from Marine Isolate Providencia rettgeri strain BTKKS1, Biosci., Biotechnol. Res. Asia, 2017, 14, 1475–1484 Search PubMed.
  209. A. S. Elobeid, A. Kamal-Eldin, M. A. K. Abdelhalim and A. M. Haseeb, Pharmacological Properties of Melanin and its Function in Health, Basic Clin. Pharmacol. Toxicol., 2017, 120, 515–522 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  210. X. Yang, C. Tang, Q. Zhao, Y. Jia, Y. Qin and J. Zhang, Melanin: A Promising Source of Functional Food Ingredient, J. Funct. Foods, 2023, 105, 105574 CrossRef CAS.
  211. A. V. Toledo, M. E. E. Franco, S. M. Yanil Lopez, M. I. Troncozo, M. C. N. Saparrat and P. A. Balatti, Melanins in fungi: Types, localization and putative biological roles, Physiol. Mol. Plant Pathol., 2017, 99, 2–6 CrossRef CAS.
  212. K. Ghattavi, A. Homaei, E. Kamrani and S.-K. Kim, Melanin Pigment Derived from Marine Organisms and Its Industrial Applications, Dyes Pigm., 2022, 201, 110214 CrossRef CAS.
  213. W. Cao, X. Zhou, N. C. McCallum, Z. Hu, Q. Z. Ni, U. Kapoor, C. M. Heil, K. S. Cay, T. Zand, A. J. Mantanona, A. Jayaraman, A. Dhinojwala, D. D. Deheyn, M. D. Shawkey, M. D. Burkart, J. D. Rinehart and N. C. Gianneschi, Unraveling the Structure and Function of Melanin through Synthesis, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2021, 143, 2622–2637 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  214. M. Z. Alam, T. Ramachandran, A. Antony, F. Hamed, M. Ayyash and A. Kamal-Eldin, Melanin is A Plenteous Bioactive Phenolic Compound in Date Fruits (Phoenix dactylifera L.), Sci. Rep., 2022, 12, 6614 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  215. A. Blazquez-Castro and J.-C. Stockert, Biomedical Overview of Melanin. 1. Updating Melanin Biology and Chemistry, Physico-Chemical Properties, Melanoma Tumors, and Photothermal Therapy, Biocell, 2021, 45, 849–862 CAS.
  216. M. Al-Amrani, A. Al-Alawi and I. Al-Marhobi, Assessment of Enzymatic Browning and Evaluation of Antibrowning Methods on Dates, Int. J. Food Sci., 2020, 2020, 1–9 CrossRef PubMed.
  217. H.-C. Huang, S.-S. Wang, T.-C. Tsai, W.-P. Ko and T.-M. Chang, Phoenix dactylifera L. Seed Extract Exhibits Antioxidant Effects and Attenuates Melanogenesis in B16F10 Murine Melanoma Cells by Downregulating PKA Signaling, Antioxidants, 2020, 9, 1270 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  218. M. van Berleere and L. Dauchet, Fruits, Vegetables, and Health: Evidence and meta-Analyses of Propsective Epidemiological Studies, in Vegetarian and Plant-Based Diets in Health and Disease Prevention, ed. F. Mariotti, Academic Press, 2017, pp. 215–248,  DOI:10.1016/B978-0-12-803968-7.00013-7.
  219. S. L. Fulton, M. C. McKinley, I. S. Young, C. R. Cardwell and J. V. Woodside, The Effect of Increasing Fruit and Vegetable Consumption on Overall Diet: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis, Crit. Rev. Food Sci. Nutr., 2016, 56, 802–816 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  220. J. M. Lattimer and M. D. Haub, Effects of Dietary Fiber and Its Components on Metabolic Health, Nutrients, 2010, 2, 1266–1289 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  221. F.-J. Dai and C.-F. Chau, Classification and Regulatory Perspectives of Dietary Fiber, J. Food Drug Anal., 2017, 25, 37–42 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  222. A. Mrabet, R. Rodríguez-Arcos, R. Guillén-Bejarano, N. Chaira, A. Ferchichi and A. Jiménez-Araujo, Dietary Fiber from Tunisian Common Date Cultivars (Phoenix dactylifera L.): Chemical Composition, Functional Properties, and Antioxidant Capacity, J. Agric. Food Chem., 2012, 60, 3658–3664 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  223. D. Mudgil and S. Barak, Composition, Properties and Health Benefits of Indigestible Carbohydrate Polymers as Dietary Fiber: A Review, Int. J. Biol. Macromol., 2013, 61, 1–6 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  224. E. Galiwango, N. S. Abdel Rahman, A. H. Al-Marzouqi, M. M. Abu-Omar and A. A. Khaleel, Isolation and Characterization of Cellulose and α-Cellulose from Date Palm Biomass Waste, Heliyon, 2019, 5, e02937 CrossRef PubMed.
  225. O. Cusola, O. J. Rojas and M. B. Roncero, Lignin Particles for Multifunctional Membranes, Antioxidative Microfiltration, Patterning, and 3D Structuring, ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2019, 11, 45226–45236 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  226. X. Hu, W. H. Lee, J. Zhao, J. Y. Bae, J. S. Kim, Z. Wang, J. Yan, Y. Zhuang and Y. M. Lee, Tröger's Base (TB)-Containing Polyimide Membranes Derived from Bio-Based Dianhydrides for Gas Separations, J. Membr. Sci., 2020, 610, 118255 CrossRef CAS.
  227. L. Shamaei, B. Khorshidi, M. A. Islam and M. Sadrzadeh, Development of Antifouling Membranes Using Agro-Industrial Waste Lignin for The Treatment of Canada's Oil Sands Produced Water, J. Membr. Sci., 2020, 611, 118326 CrossRef CAS.
  228. S. R. Yearla and K. Padmasree, Preparation and Characterisation of Lignin Nanoparticles: Evaluation of Their Potential as Antioxidants and UV Protectants, J. Exp. Nanosci., 2016, 11, 289–302 CrossRef CAS.
  229. R. R. Krueger, The Date Palm Genome, in Phylogeny, Biodiversity and Mapping, ed. J. M. Al-Khayri, S. M. Jain and D. V. Johnson, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2021, pp. 3–28,  DOI:10.1007/978-3-030-73746-7_1.
  230. T. A. Golshan and M. Fooladi, A Study on The Physico-Chemical Properties of Iranian Shamsaei Date at Different Stages of Maturity, World J. Dairy Food Sci., 2006, 1, 28–32 Search PubMed.
  231. R. Al Udhaib, Solvent Extraction of Antioxidants, Phenols and Flavonoids from Saudi Arabia Dates, Master of Applied Science, Dalhousie University, Canada, 2015.
  232. C. D. Venkatachalam and M. Sengottian, Study on Roasted Date Seed Non Caffeinated Coffee Powder as A Promising Alternative, Asian J. Res. Soc. Sci. Humanit., 2016, 6, 1387–1394 Search PubMed.
  233. S. Ghnimi, R. Almansoori, B. Jobe, M. Hassan and K. Afaf, Quality Evaluation of Coffee-Like Beverage from Date Seeds (Phoenix dactylifera L.), J. Food Process. Technol., 2015, 6, 12 Search PubMed.
  234. M. Alamri, A. Mohamed, S. Hussain and I. Al-Ruquie, Berhi Dates Pits-Enriched Bread: Effect on Dough Rheology, Bread Quality, and Shelf Life, Ital. J. Food Sci., 2014, 26, 62 Search PubMed.
  235. S. Ammar, I. Salem and R. Habiba, Chemical and Rheological Characteristics of Butter Cake as Affected by Date Seed Powder Addition, Suez Canal Univ. J. Food Sci., 2013, 1, 13–18 Search PubMed.
  236. M. A. Bouaziz, F. Abbes, A. Mokni, C. Blecker, H. Attia and S. Besbes, The Addition Effect of Tunisian Date Seed Fibers on The Quality of Chocolate Spreads, J. Texture Stud., 2017, 48, 143–150 CrossRef PubMed.
  237. M. A. Salem, Y. E. Samir, L. D. Elmahdy and A. Heba, Optimizing of The Variables Affecting of Backer'S Yeast Production by Using Rice Straw, Date Flesh and Date Seeds Hydrolysates, Presented in Part at the The 2nd Mans International Food Conference, 2016 Search PubMed.
  238. M. Amany, M. Shaker and A. Abeer, Antioxidant Activities of Date Pits in A Model Meat System, Int. Food Res. J., 2012, 19, 223–227 CAS.
  239. N. K. Alqahtan, H. M. M. Makki, H. A.-M. Mohamed, T. M. M. Alnemr, W. A. Al-Senaien, S. A. M. Al-Ali and A. R. Ahmed, The Potential of Using Bisr Date Powder as a Novel Ingredient in Beef Burgers: The Effect on Chemical Composition, Cooking Properties, Microbial Analysis, and Organoleptic Properties, Sustainability, 2022, 14, 14143 CrossRef CAS.
  240. A. A. Darwish, M. A. Tawfek and E. A. Baker, Texture, Sensory Attributes and Antioxidant Activity of Spreadable Processed Cheese with Adding Date Seed Powder, J. Food Dairy Sci., 2020, 11, 377–383 CrossRef.
  241. M. M. M. Basiony, M. Z. Eid and R. I. El-Metwally, Composition and Quality of Kareish Cheese Supplemented with Probiotic Bacteria and Dietary Fibers, J. Food Dairy Sci., 2018, 9, 327–332 CrossRef.
  242. M. Khiyami, B. Aboseide and A. Pometto, Influence of complex nutrient sources: Dates syrup and dates pits on Lactococcus lactis growth and nisin production, J. Biotechnol., 2008, 136, S736 CrossRef.
  243. W. M. El-Kholy, Production of Probiotic Yoghurt Fortified with Date Seeds (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Powder as Prebiotic and Natural Stabilizer, Egypt. J. Agric. Res., 2018, 96, 159–173 Search PubMed.
  244. S. Shabnam, A. H. Dar, M. B. Aga and S. A. Khan, Effect of Date Powder and Peach Pomace Powder on The Microstructure and Functional Attributes of Cookies, J. Postharvest Technol., 2020, 8, 37–49 Search PubMed.
  245. B. Bchir, T. Jean-François, H. N. Rabetafika and C. Blecker, Effect of Pear Apple and Date Fibres Incorporation on The Physico-Chemical, Sensory, Nutritional Characteristics and The Acceptability of Cereal Bars, Food Sci. Technol. Int., 2018, 24, 198–208 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  246. C. Borchani, C. Blecker, H. Attia, M. Masmoudi and S. Besbes, Effect of Date Flesh Fiber Concentrate Addition on Bread Texture, Turk. J. Sci. Technol., 2015, 10, 17–22 Search PubMed.
  247. C. Borchani, M. Masmoudi, S. Besbes, H. Attia, C. Deroanne and C. Blecker, Effect of Date Flesh Fiber Concentrate Addition on Dough Performance and Bread Quality, J. Texture Stud., 2011, 42, 300–308 CrossRef.
  248. A. Majid, F. Naz, S. Bhatti and A.-R. Phull, Phenolic Profile and Antioxidant Activities of Three Date Seeds Varieties (Phoenix dactylifera L.) of Pakistan, Explor. Res. Hypothesis Med., 2023, 8, 195–201 Search PubMed.
  249. J. O. Airouyuwa, H. Mostafa, M. Ranasinghe and S. Maqsood, Influence of Physicochemical Properties of Carboxylic Acid-Based Natural Deep Eutectic Solvents (CA-NADES) on Extraction and Stability of Bioactive Compounds from Date (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seeds: An Innovative and Sustainable Extraction Technique, J. Mol. Liq., 2023, 388, 122767 CrossRef CAS.
  250. J. Osamede-Airouyuwa, H. Mostafa, A. Riaz and S. Maqsood, Utilization of Natural Deep Eutectic Solvents and Ultrasound-Assisted Extraction as Green Extraction Technique for The Recovery of Bioactive Compounds From Date Palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Seeds: An Investigation into Optimization of Process Parameters, Ultrason. Sonochem., 2022, 91, 106233 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  251. S. Hilary, F. A. Tomás-Barberán, J. A. Martinez-Blazquez, J. Kizhakkayil, U. Souka, S. Al-Hammadi, H. Habib, W. Ibrahim and C. Platat, Polyphenol Characterisation of Phoenix dactylifera L. (Date) Seeds Using HPLC-Mass Spectrometry and Its Bioaccessibility Using Simulated In-Vitro Digestion/Caco-2 Culture Model, Food Chem., 2020, 311, 125969 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  252. A. Mrabet, A. Jiménez-Araujo, Á. Fernández-Prior, A. Bermúdez-Oria, J. Fernández-Bolaños, M. Sindic and G. Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, Date Seed: Rich Source of Antioxidant Phenolics Obtained by Hydrothermal Treatments, Antioxidants, 2022, 11, 1914 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  253. A. Zrelli, W. Elfalleh, A. Ghorbal and B. Chaouachi, Valorization of Date Palm Wastes by Lignin Extraction to be Used for The Improvement of Polymeric Membrane Characteristics, Period. Polytech., Chem. Eng., 2022, 66, 70–81 CrossRef CAS.
  254. W. Warsinah, E. D. Utami and H. N. Baroroh, The Phenolic Compounds of Ethanolic Extract of Date Seed (Phoenix dactylifera L.) Exert Hepatoprotective Activity on Rat Induced Carragenan, J. Ilm. Farm., 2022, 79–86 Search PubMed.

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024