Learning outcomes expected at the level of the course (4 to 10 learning outcomes) |
After passing the exam students will be able to: - describe basic terms, types of species and medicinal herbs, preparation of extracts and their useful application - demonstrate basic procedures of processing species and medicinal plants and extraction methods - determine appropriate analysis methods of the obtained extracts or plant materials and methods of determination of antioxidant and antibacterial properties - suggest appropriate procedures of processing of species and medicinal plants considering basic postulates of extraction, analysis of extracts considering artefacts formation and impact to composition and properties of the product - select appropriate approach in solving the problems in the area of processing of species and medicinal herbs, starting from knowledge from chemistry, technology and biotechnology |
Course content broken down in detail by weekly class schedule (syllabus) |
1st week: Introduction, history and use of medicinal herbs; Definition of medicinal herbs and aromatic plants 2nd week: taxonomy, nomenclature and classification; Distribution in Croatia and abroad; wild and cultivated plants; potential of the Mediterranean climate. 3rd and 4th week: Selected species of medicinal plants and herbs and their importance in the food industry, representatives of some major plant families (legumes, daisies, cloves, roses, anemones, lilies, wheat or grass, meadow grass). 5th and 6th week: Production steps: Select and Collection/Harvesting (seeds, leaves, roots), Transportation, Quality of raw material (the determination of pesticides, mycotoxins, microbiological...); 7th week: Mulching; Drying (chamber and tunnel dryers, microwave drying, spray freeze and reverse osmosis), cleaning, packaging and labeling products; Preservation. 8th week: I. colloquium 9th week: Herbal preparations (liquid and dry extracts), liquid extract (the degree of fragmentation, extraction tool, extraction); 10th week: First group of extraction methods (maceration, bimaceration, digestion, infusion, decoction, turboextraction, ultrasonic extraction); 11th week: Second group of methods of extraction (percolation, repercolation, diacolation, evacolation). 12th and 13th week: Active and effective substances, antioxidant and antimicrobial properties of biologically active compounds from herbs and aromatic plants, analysis of plant material; Factors affecting the quality of active ingredients. 14th week: The most important products, teas and tea blends, spice powders, spice extracts and concentrates, legal restrictions. 15th week: II. colloquium Exercises: The quality analysis of raw materials and finished products; Herbal preparations using different extraction procedures, testing the influence of extraction parameters on the composition and properties of herbal preparations (degree of fragmentation of plant material, extraction solvent, duration, temperature, stirring, ultrasound); Determination of major components in herbal preparations by spectrophotometric and chromatographic methods, testing the biological activity of herbal preparations (antioxidant and/or antimicrobial properties); Application of herbal products in the selected food products. |