🍊
Practical Course · 1 Credit · 100 Level

VOS 165 — Fruit Juice
& Beverages

From orchard to bottle: fruits, processing, packaging, and traditional Nigerian beverages

6Units
15+Concepts
6Practicals
6Quizzes

Welcome to Fruit Juice & Beverages

A practical-based, 1-credit course that walks you from the fruit on the tree to the bottle on the supermarket shelf. Each unit includes lecture content, a hands-on practical, a self-check quiz, and a classwork/assignment.

🎯 Course Learning Outcomes
  • Explain the origin and meaning of fruit juice and beverages, and distinguish between them
  • Identify fruits, their parts, and select fruits suitable for juice production
  • Examine common locally manufactured fruit juices in southwestern Nigeria
  • Describe the unit operations of industrial fruit-juice production
  • Compare bottling, packaging, and storage methods used in the beverage industry
  • Prepare common traditional Nigerian fruit juices and discuss their health benefits
UNIT 01

Introduction to Fruit Juice Production

Origin of fruit juice · What are beverages · Differences between juice and beverages

Learning Outcomes

  • Define fruit juice and beverage and trace their historical origin
  • Classify beverages into alcoholic, non-alcoholic, hot and cold types
  • Distinguish fruit juice from a beverage using clear criteria
  • Appreciate the economic and nutritional importance of fruit juice in Nigeria

1.1 Origin of Fruit Juice Production

Fruit juice production is as old as human civilisation. Archaeological evidence shows that as far back as ~6000 BC, people in the Caucasus and Middle East crushed grapes, pomegranates and figs by foot or stone to release their juice. Ancient Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans drank pressed citrus, grape and pomegranate juice. In West Africa, traditional pressing of citrus, palm fruit and tamarind has been practised for centuries.

The industrial era of fruit-juice production began in the 19th century with Louis Pasteur's discovery of pasteurization (1864), which made it possible to preserve juice without fermentation. The 20th century brought aseptic packaging (Tetra Pak, 1951) and frozen concentrate, transforming juice into a global commodity.

EraKey Development
~6000 BCPressing of grapes, figs, pomegranates by hand or stone
Ancient Egypt & RomeCitrus and grape juice in royal courts; first records of "must"
1864Pasteur's heat treatment — birth of preserved bottled juice
1869Dr. Thomas Welch produces first unfermented grape juice
1915–1930Frozen orange-juice concentrate developed in the USA
1951Tetra Pak aseptic carton invented
1970s–presentModern Nigerian juice industry: Chivita (CHI Ltd, 1980), Dansa, Frutta, Beloxxi, etc.

1.2 What are Beverages?

A beverage is any drinkable liquid prepared for human consumption other than plain water. Beverages can be made from water, milk, fruits, grains, herbs, or chemical flavourings, and may be served hot or cold.

ClassSub-classExamples
Non-alcoholicFruit-basedOrange juice, mango nectar, zobo
Non-alcoholicCereal-basedKunu, ogi/akamu, malt drinks (e.g., Maltina)
Non-alcoholicCarbonated soft drinksCoca-Cola, Pepsi, Fanta, 7-Up
Non-alcoholicHot beveragesTea, coffee, cocoa, herbal infusions
Non-alcoholicDairy-basedYoghurt drink, milk, fura da nono
AlcoholicFermentedPalm wine, beer, wine, burukutu
AlcoholicDistilledOgogoro, gin, vodka, brandy

1.3 Differences between Fruit Juice and Beverages

CriterionFruit JuiceBeverage
DefinitionThe liquid naturally extracted from fruitsAny drinkable liquid prepared for consumption
SourceStrictly from edible fruitsFruits, cereals, milk, herbs, chemicals or any combination
CompositionMostly fruit pulp/juice; may have some waterMay contain water, sugar, flavourings, colours, preservatives, alcohol, gas
Nutritional valueRich in vitamins (C, A), minerals, antioxidants, fibreVariable — some are highly nutritious, others mostly sugar/empty calories
Examples100% orange juice, fresh pineapple juice, mango juiceCoca-Cola, beer, tea, kunu, malt drink
Regulation"100% juice" labels regulated by NAFDAC/CodexBroader regulation depending on category
ℹ️
Rule of thumb: Every fruit juice is a beverage, but not every beverage is a fruit juice. A drink labelled "fruit drink", "nectar" or "juice cocktail" usually contains added water and sugar, and only a small fraction of real fruit juice.

1.4 Why Study Fruit Juice Production?

🍍 Importance of the Sub-Sector
  • Health and nutrition: Juices supply vitamin C, vitamin A precursors, potassium, and antioxidants.
  • Food preservation: Converting perishable fruits into shelf-stable juice reduces post-harvest losses (currently 30–40% in Nigeria).
  • Employment & entrepreneurship: Small and medium juice enterprises create jobs at every step — farming, processing, packaging, distribution.
  • Foreign exchange: Local juice production reduces import dependence and saves foreign currency.
  • Value addition: Adds significant economic value to raw fruits.
🧪 Practical Demonstration — Unit 1

Beverage Identification & Sorting

  1. Each student brings two beverages (any kind) from home or the market.
  2. In groups of five, sort the collected items into: (a) 100% fruit juice, (b) fruit drink/nectar, (c) carbonated soft drink, (d) cereal/dairy beverage, (e) alcoholic beverage.
  3. Read the labels and record: brand name, declared juice content (%), added water, sweeteners, preservatives, NAFDAC number.
  4. Discuss why some "juices" are actually drinks.
📝 Self-Check Quiz — Unit 1
Which of the following is the most accurate definition of a fruit juice?
📝 Classwork & Assignment — Unit 1

A. Classwork (in lecture, 15 min)

  1. Define fruit juice and beverage in your own words.
  2. Give two examples each of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages produced in Nigeria.
  3. List four differences between fruit juice and a beverage.

B. Take-Home Assignment (due next class)

  • Write a short essay (300–400 words) titled "From Pressing Stones to Tetra Pak: A Brief History of Fruit Juice."
  • Visit a local supermarket and list 10 different fruit-based beverages on sale. For each, record the name, claimed % juice, and price per litre. Tabulate your results.
Marks: 10 · Submit at the start of Unit 2
UNIT 02

What are Fruits?

Definition · Parts of a fruit · Juicy regions · Fruits suitable for juicing · Fruits of SW Nigeria

Learning Outcomes

  • Define a fruit in botanical and culinary terms
  • Identify the main parts of a typical fruit (pericarp layers)
  • Locate the juicy region of common fruits
  • Select fruits that are physically and economically suitable for juicing
  • List common fruits cultivated in southwestern Nigeria

2.1 Definition of a Fruit

Botanically, a fruit is the mature, ripened ovary of a flowering plant, usually containing one or more seeds. In everyday or culinary terms, fruits are the fleshy, sweet or tart edible plant parts eaten as snacks or used to make juice, jam, wine, etc.

TermDefinitionExample
True fruitDevelops only from the ovary of the flowerMango, orange, grape
False / accessory fruitOther floral parts (receptacle, bracts) form most of the fruitApple, cashew, strawberry
Simple fruitFrom a single ovaryMango, tomato, banana
Aggregate fruitFrom many ovaries of one flowerSoursop, raspberry
Multiple / composite fruitFrom many flowers fused togetherPineapple, breadfruit, fig

2.2 Parts of a Fruit

The wall of a true fruit is called the pericarp and is divided into three layers:

LayerPositionDescription
Epicarp (exocarp)OutermostThe skin or peel — protects the fruit (e.g., orange peel, mango skin)
MesocarpMiddleUsually the fleshy, juicy part (e.g., mango pulp)
EndocarpInnermostSurrounds the seed; can be hard (mango stone) or soft (orange juice sacs)
Figure 2.1 — Generic fleshy fruit structure
Seed Epicarp (skin) Mesocarp (flesh) Endocarp Pericarp = epi + meso + endo

2.3 Juicy Parts of Fruits

The juicy part of a fruit is the layer that contains the bulk of the cell sap (water, sugars, organic acids, vitamins, pigments). For most fruits this is the mesocarp, but in citrus it is specialised juice sacs within the endocarp.

FruitJuicy PartNote
Orange / lemon / grapefruitEndocarp — juice sacs (vesicles)Yields 40–55% juice by weight
MangoMesocarp (yellow flesh)Yields 35–55%
PineappleFused mesocarp of many flowersYields 50–60%
WatermelonMesocarp + placental tissueYields 60–70%
GuavaWhole mesocarp + endocarp pulpHighest vitamin C among common fruits
Tomato (botanical fruit)Mesocarp + locular jellyYields 80%+ juice; mostly water

2.4 Fruits Suitable for Beverage Production

Not every edible fruit is good for commercial juicing. The ideal candidate combines high yield with good flavour stability.

✅ Selection Criteria
  • High juice yield (≥ 40%) by weight.
  • Good flavour and aroma — sufficient sugars and aromatic volatiles.
  • Bright, stable colour that survives heat treatment.
  • Sufficient acidity (pH 3.5–4.5) for natural preservation.
  • Easy to peel/extract with available equipment.
  • Year-round or seasonal abundance at affordable price.
  • Resistance to enzymatic browning and microbial spoilage.
FruitSuitabilityWhy
Orange (Citrus sinensis)ExcellentHigh yield, bright flavour, vitamin C
Pineapple (Ananas comosus)ExcellentHigh sugar, distinctive aroma, acidity preserves juice
Mango (Mangifera indica)Very goodRich flavour and β-carotene; needs blending with water for thinner juice
Pawpaw (Carica papaya)GoodSoft pulp; better as nectar than clear juice
WatermelonGoodRefreshing but low acidity → short shelf life
GuavaGoodHigh vitamin C; gritty seeds need filtering
BananaLimitedPulpy; better for smoothies and shakes
AvocadoLimitedFatty; not a true juice candidate

2.5 Common Fruits in Southwestern Nigeria

Southwestern Nigeria (Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo, Ekiti) lies in the humid tropical belt and supports a wide range of fruits, both indigenous and exotic.

FruitYoruba nameSeason (peak)
OrangeOsànNov–Mar
TangerineOsàn mɔsɒmbɔluNov–Feb
PineappleẸdūnAll year, peak Mar–Jun
MangoMángòròMar–Jul
Pawpaw / papayaẸwedùAll year
Banana / plantainÒgẹdẹ òmní / Ògẹdẹ agɔagɔAll year
WatermelonBàràDry season, Nov–Apr
GuavaGólùabaAug–Nov
CoconutÀgbọnAll year
African star appleAgbalumo / udaraDec–Mar
SoursopÈwè edùnSep–Jan
Cashew appleKàshùFeb–May
Avocado pearÈwè òyìnbóJul–Oct
African velvet tamarindAwinDec–Apr
🧪 Practical Demonstration — Unit 2

Fruit Identification & Dissection

  1. Each group is given five fresh fruits common in southwestern Nigeria (e.g., orange, mango, pineapple, pawpaw, watermelon).
  2. Wash and weigh each fruit. Cut a longitudinal section.
  3. Identify and label epicarp, mesocarp and endocarp on each.
  4. Mark the juicy part. Estimate the percentage of the fruit by weight that is juicy flesh.
  5. Submit one labelled drawing per fruit.
📝 Self-Check Quiz — Unit 2
In an orange, which part of the fruit contains the juicy vesicles that yield the juice?
📝 Classwork & Assignment — Unit 2

A. Classwork

  1. Define a fruit (botanically and culinarily).
  2. Label a diagram of a generic fleshy fruit.
  3. List five fruits common in your locality and the season each is most abundant.

B. Take-Home Assignment

  • Prepare a one-page table titled "Fruits Suitable for Juice Production in Southwestern Nigeria" with columns: fruit, Yoruba name, peak season, juicy part, % yield, suitability for commercial juicing.
  • Mini-research: write a 250-word note on any one indigenous southwestern fruit (e.g., agbalumo, awin, soursop) and its juice potential.
Marks: 10 · Submit at the start of Unit 3
UNIT 03

Examination of Local Fruit Juices in Southwestern Nigeria

Major brands · Flavours · Ingredients · Market positioning

Learning Outcomes

  • Identify the major fruit-juice brands manufactured and sold in southwestern Nigeria
  • Compare brands by flavour range, declared ingredients and packaging
  • Read and interpret a juice product label
  • Critically evaluate "100% juice" versus "fruit drink" claims

3.1 Overview of the Local Juice Market

Southwestern Nigeria is the most active hub for the country's fruit-juice industry, with major manufacturers head-quartered in Lagos, Ogun and Oyo states. Brands are sold in supermarkets, neighbourhood shops, hawker stands and increasingly online. Most are produced locally from a mix of fresh fruit and imported concentrate.

3.2 Major Local Fruit-Juice Brands

3.1 Premium juice
Chivita 100% Fruit Juice
Made from quality natural ingredients with no added preservatives or sweeteners. Available in flavours such as orange, pineapple, mango, apple and red grape.
3.2 Mass market
Fan Milk Fruit Juice
Offers small portion packs in flavours such as orange, pineapple, mango, apple and cranberry, with no artificial flavours or preservatives.
3.3 Locally sourced
Dansa Foods Fruit Juice
Made from locally grown fruits. Available in flavours including pineapple, orange, mango, apple and mixed fruit, with no added sugar or preservatives.
3.4 Ogun State
Beloxxi Fruit Juice
Produced in Ogun State and available in flavours such as orange, pineapple, mango, apple and cranberry, with no preservatives or artificial sweeteners.
3.5 Niche tropical blend
Tee & Cee Pineapple Coconut Juice
A refreshing blend of pineapple and coconut, made with locally sourced fruits and no added sugar or preservatives.
3.6 Specialty single fruit
Frutta Tropica Passion Fruit Juice
Made from 100% pure passion fruit grown in Nigeria. Rich in antioxidants and vitamins.

These juices are widely available in supermarkets and stores across Southwestern Nigeria.

3.3 Comparing Brands at a Glance

BrandOriginTypical FlavoursSelling Point
ChivitaCHI Ltd, LagosOrange, pineapple, mango, apple, red grape"100% fruit juice"; no preservatives or sweeteners
Fan MilkLagosOrange, pineapple, mango, apple, cranberrySmall portion packs; no artificial flavours
Dansa FoodsLagos / OgunPineapple, orange, mango, apple, mixed fruitLocally grown fruits; no added sugar
BeloxxiOgun StateOrange, pineapple, mango, apple, cranberryNo preservatives or artificial sweeteners
Tee & CeeSW NigeriaPineapple-coconut blendNiche tropical blend; no added sugar
Frutta TropicaLagosPassion fruit (single)100% Nigerian passion fruit; rich in antioxidants

3.4 How to Read a Juice Label

🔎 Information You Must Find on the Pack
  • Product name & type: "100% juice", "nectar", "fruit drink", "blend".
  • Ingredients list: in descending order of weight.
  • Declared juice content (%): e.g., "100%", "30%", "10% juice from concentrate".
  • Nutritional information: energy, sugars, vitamin C, etc., per 100 ml and per serving.
  • Manufacturer / address: tells you where the juice was packed.
  • NAFDAC reg. no.: proof of regulatory clearance in Nigeria.
  • Batch / production / expiry dates.
  • Storage instructions: "Refrigerate after opening", "Store in a cool dry place".

3.5 "100% Juice" vs "Fruit Drink" — Spotting the Difference

Feature100% JuiceNectarFruit Drink
Juice content100%25–50%5–10%
Added water?NoYesYes (mostly water)
Added sugar?Usually noOften yesYes
Preservatives?Usually no (heat preserved)SometimesOften
Typical priceHighestMid-rangeLowest
🧪 Practical Demonstration — Unit 3

Market Survey & Sensory Evaluation

  1. In groups of four, visit a nearby supermarket or open market.
  2. Photograph and record the labels of at least eight different fruit juices/drinks (including the six brands listed above).
  3. Capture: brand, flavour, package type, declared juice %, list of ingredients, price, NAFDAC number.
  4. Back in class, conduct a blind sensory test on three brands of orange juice. Each panelist scores the samples for: appearance, aroma, sweetness, sourness, overall acceptability (5-point scale).
  5. Compute mean scores per brand and present findings.
📝 Self-Check Quiz — Unit 3
A pack labelled "Fruit Drink — contains 10% juice from concentrate" should be classified as:
📝 Classwork & Assignment — Unit 3

A. Classwork

  1. List the six juice brands covered in this unit and one unique selling point of each.
  2. Identify three pieces of information that must appear on every juice label.
  3. Differentiate between "100% juice", "nectar" and "fruit drink".

B. Take-Home Assignment

  • Pick any two brands you surveyed in the practical and write a one-page comparison covering: ingredients, juice content, packaging, taste, price per litre, and value for money.
  • Recommend, with reasons, which of the two you would buy and why.
Marks: 15 · Submit before Unit 4 lecture
UNIT 04

Production of Fruit Juice

Selection · Extraction · Filtering · Pasteurization · Bottling · Quality Control · Concentrate

Learning Outcomes

  • Outline the unit operations of an industrial fruit-juice line
  • Describe selection, washing and pre-treatment of fruits
  • Explain the principles of juice extraction, filtration and pasteurization
  • Distinguish juice made from fresh fruit from juice made from concentrate
  • Recognise key quality-control checks in juice production

4.0 The Production Flowchart

STEP 1
Selection & Preparation
Sort, wash, peel, de-stone
STEP 2
Juice Extraction
Pressing, milling, reaming
STEP 3
Filtering & Batch Prep
Strain, deaerate, blend
STEP 4
Pasteurization
Heat to kill microbes
STEP 5
Filling & Bottling
Hot fill / aseptic fill
STEP 6
Quality Control
pH, Brix, microbial test

4.1 Selection and Preparation

Production begins with careful sourcing. Fruits should be fresh, firm, fully ripe and free from rot. Sorting removes damaged or under-ripe pieces. Selected fruits are then washed thoroughly with clean water, sometimes with mild chlorine solution, to remove dust, dirt, microbes and pesticide residues. Where required, fruits are peeled (orange, mango, pineapple) and de-stoned, de-seeded or cored.

ActivityPurpose
Sorting / gradingRemoves spoiled, under-ripe, over-ripe and damaged fruits
WashingRemoves soil, microbes and pesticide residues
Peeling / coring / de-stoningRemoves inedible parts that affect flavour and yield
Blanching (for some fruits)Inactivates browning enzymes and softens tissue

4.2 Juice Extraction

Different fruits require different extractors. The principle is the same: rupture the juice-bearing cells and collect the liquid while discarding skin, pith and seeds.

MethodBest ForDescription
Hand reaming / squeezingCitrus (small scale)Half the fruit and twist over a reamer; gives clear juice
Mechanical citrus extractorIndustrial citrusCup-and-tube system squeezes whole fruit; juice channelled out
Pulper / finisherMango, guava, pawpawFruit pushed through perforated screen; pulp passes, seeds rejected
Hammer mill / hydraulic pressApple, pineappleCrushed fruit pressed under pressure to release juice
Decanter centrifugeBerries, cherriesSeparates juice from solids by spinning

4.3 Filtering and Batch Preparation

The raw juice contains pulp particles, seeds, fibres and air bubbles. Filtration / sieving / centrifugation remove unwanted solids depending on whether a clear juice (orange, apple) or a cloudy juice/nectar (mango, guava) is desired. Deaeration removes dissolved oxygen to prevent oxidation of vitamin C and colour pigments during heat treatment. Several batches may then be blended to standardise sugar (°Brix), acidity and flavour.

4.4 Pasteurization

Pasteurization is a controlled heat treatment that kills spoilage microorganisms and inactivates enzymes, extending shelf life without significantly changing flavour or nutrition.

MethodTemperature / TimeUse
Low Temperature Long Time (LTLT)63–65 °C for 30 minSmall-scale, batch
High Temperature Short Time (HTST)72–85 °C for 15–30 sMost industrial juice
Ultra High Temperature (UHT)135–150 °C for 2–6 sLong shelf-life aseptic juice (Tetra Pak)
🌡️
Pasteurization is named after Louis Pasteur who first applied controlled heat to wine and milk in the 1860s. Today, virtually all bottled juice in Nigeria is pasteurized.

4.5 Filling and Bottling

  • Hot fill: juice is filled at ≅85 °C into clean bottles, capped, then cooled. Used for PET bottles and glass.
  • Aseptic fill: juice and packaging are sterilised separately and combined under sterile conditions — standard for Tetra Pak.
  • Cold fill with preservation: uses chemical preservatives; less common for branded juice today.

4.6 Quality Control

ParameterWhy measuredTypical target
pHAcidity controls microbial growth3.5 – 4.2 for citrus
Brix (°Bx)Soluble solids → sweetness10 – 14 °Bx for orange juice
Titratable aciditySourness0.5 – 1.5 % citric acid
Vitamin C contentNutritional claim30–50 mg / 100 ml (orange)
Microbial loadSafety, shelf lifeLow coliform count, no pathogens
Sensory panelConsumer acceptanceScore ≥ 7/10 for taste, aroma, colour

4.7 Juice from Concentrate

Many bottled juices in Nigeria are made from concentrate. Fresh juice is heated under vacuum to evaporate water until the original 12 °Bx becomes ~65 °Bx — a thick, syrupy concentrate. This is easier to ship, freeze and store. At the bottling plant, water (and sometimes pulp and aroma) is added back to "reconstitute" the juice before pasteurization.

FeatureNot from Concentrate (NFC)From Concentrate (FC)
ProcessPressed and pasteurized onlyPressed → concentrated → reconstituted
Volume to shipLarge1/5 to 1/6
CostHigherLower
FlavourCloser to freshSlightly altered — added "back-flavour" needed
Common label"Not from concentrate""Made from concentrate"
🧪 Practical Demonstration — Unit 4

Small-Scale Orange Juice Production

  1. Selection: pick 10 ripe oranges, sort out damaged ones, weigh.
  2. Washing: wash in clean water with a few drops of salt or chlorine, rinse.
  3. Extraction: halve the oranges and squeeze with a hand reamer or kitchen juicer. Collect juice in a clean stainless or food-grade plastic container. Weigh juice and calculate % yield.
  4. Filtering: pass juice through a clean muslin cloth to remove pulp and seeds.
  5. Pasteurization: heat juice in a stainless pot to 75 °C and hold for 30 s, monitoring with a thermometer.
  6. Hot fill: immediately fill clean, hot bottles to the brim, cap tightly and invert for 1 minute. Cool under running water.
  7. Quality check: measure pH (litmus or pH meter) and Brix (refractometer). Record colour and aroma.
  8. Storage: store half in fridge, half at room temperature. Re-examine after 1 week and discuss differences.
📝 Self-Check Quiz — Unit 4
In an HTST pasteurizer, fruit juice is typically heated to:
📝 Classwork & Assignment — Unit 4

A. Classwork

  1. Draw the seven-step flowchart of fruit-juice production.
  2. State two equipment options for extracting juice from oranges and from mangoes respectively.
  3. Define pasteurization and state the temperature/time for HTST.

B. Practical Lab Report

  • Submit a typed report on the small-scale orange juice you produced (Practical 4) covering: aim, materials, method, % juice yield, pH, Brix, sensory observations, discussion and conclusion.
  • Discuss the difference observed between the refrigerated and room-temperature samples after one week.
  • Maximum 1000 words.
Marks: 20 · Submit before Unit 5
UNIT 05

Bottling, Packaging & Storage of Fruit Juice

Bottle types · Label design · Aseptic packs · Storage conditions

Learning Outcomes

  • Identify the major packaging containers used for fruit juice
  • Compare PET, glass, Tetra Pak, pouches and cups
  • Describe the elements of an effective juice label
  • Match the right storage method to the right product

5.1 Bottling — The Container Choices

The choice of pack affects shelf life, cost, transport and consumer appeal. Each material has trade-offs.

ContainerProsConsTypical Use
PET (plastic) bottleLight, unbreakable, cheap, recyclableLess barrier to oxygen, can deform under heatMost large-volume juices in Nigeria (1 L, 1.5 L)
Glass bottleExcellent barrier, premium look, reusableHeavy, breakable, expensivePremium juices, export, kid sizes
Aseptic carton (Tetra Pak)6–12 month shelf life without refrigeration; lightweightSpecialised filler needed; difficult to recycleLong-life juice in 200 mL, 1 L
Pouches (sachets / stand-up)Very low cost; small portionsLess protective; image of cheaper productMass-market, school packs, hawker trade
Plastic cups / jugsConvenient single-serveShort shelf life; leak riskFrozen "ice juice", Fan Milk-type packs

5.2 Packaging — The Label Tells the Story

Packaging is more than just a container — it is the silent salesperson. A good juice label must inform, attract and persuade.

🏷️ Essential Label Elements
  • Brand name & logo — distinctive identity.
  • Product description — e.g., "100% Pineapple Juice", "Mango Nectar".
  • List of ingredients in descending order of weight.
  • Nutritional information per 100 mL and per serving (energy, sugars, vitamins).
  • Net volume (e.g., 250 mL, 1 L).
  • Manufacturer name & address.
  • NAFDAC registration number.
  • Batch / production / expiry dates.
  • Storage instructions (e.g., "Refrigerate after opening").
  • Bar code & recycling symbol.
  • Attractive graphics — colours, fruit images, themes.

5.3 Storage of Fruit Juice

Juice begins to lose flavour, vitamins and colour from the moment it is packaged. Correct storage extends shelf life.

Storage TypeConditionsBest ForShelf Life
Refrigerated storage2–6 °CFresh juice, opened cartons, NFC juice3–7 days (opened); up to 30 days unopened
Cool dry place15–25 °C, away from sunlightPasteurized PET/glass juice unopened3–6 months
Aseptic (ambient) storageUp to 30 °C, sealed Tetra PakUHT-packed long-life juice6–12 months
Freezer storage−18 °C or lowerFrozen concentrate, fresh-squeezed juice6–12 months
⚠️
Once opened, even long-life juice MUST be kept in the refrigerator and consumed within 3–5 days, because contact with air and microbes restarts spoilage.

5.4 Spoilage Indicators

  • Swollen pack — gas formed by yeast/bacteria; do not consume.
  • Off-odour (alcoholic, vinegary, "yeasty").
  • Cloudy or layered appearance in clear juice.
  • Mould growth on the surface or under the cap.
  • Sour or fizzy taste in a juice that is not meant to be carbonated.
🧪 Practical Demonstration — Unit 5

Packaging Survey & Storage Trial

  1. Collect five empty juice packs of different types: PET bottle, glass bottle, Tetra Pak, pouch, and plastic cup.
  2. For each, record: material, weight, capacity, label elements present, and stated storage instructions.
  3. Pour 50 mL of the orange juice you produced in Unit 4 into three identical clean bottles. Store one at room temperature in shade, one in direct sunlight, and one in the fridge.
  4. Examine all three after 24 h, 72 h and 7 days. Record colour, smell, taste (if still safe) and any visible spoilage.
  5. Submit a comparison table and a short discussion.
📝 Self-Check Quiz — Unit 5
A juice in a Tetra Pak is found to be still safe at room temperature 8 months after production because:
📝 Classwork & Assignment — Unit 5

A. Classwork

  1. List five packaging containers used for fruit juice with one advantage and one disadvantage of each.
  2. State seven elements that must appear on a juice label.
  3. Match each storage method (refrigerated, cool dry, aseptic, freezer) with one product example.

B. Take-Home / Design Assignment

  • Design a label (A4 size, hand-drawn or digital) for an imaginary fruit juice from any local fruit covered in Unit 2 (e.g., agbalumo, soursop, tamarind).
  • Your label MUST include all the essential elements listed in 5.2.
  • Write a 100-word description of your target customer and why your design will appeal to them.
Marks: 15 · Submit before Unit 6
UNIT 06

Traditional Fruit Juices & Health Benefits

Zobo · Kunu · Orange juice · Pineapple juice

Learning Outcomes

  • Identify common traditional Nigerian beverages
  • Prepare zobo, kunu, fresh orange and fresh pineapple juice safely
  • State the major health benefits of each drink
  • Discuss possible side effects and recommended intake

6.1 Zobo — Hibiscus sabdariffa

Zobo is a deep red drink prepared from the dried calyces (sepals) of Hibiscus sabdariffa. It is drunk widely in northern and southwestern Nigeria, often spiced with ginger, cloves, pineapple peels and a little sweetener.

ItemDetail
SourceDried red hibiscus calyces (locally zobo leaves; Yoruba Isóswò; Hausa Yakuwa)
MethodBoil/steep calyces in water with ginger and cloves, sieve, sweeten lightly
Active compoundsAnthocyanins, polyphenols, organic acids, vitamin C
Health benefitsLowers blood pressure, antioxidant, mild diuretic, supports liver health, aids digestion
CautionExcess intake may interfere with blood-pressure medication; pregnant women advised to limit intake

6.2 Kunu (Kunun-zaki)

Kunu is a non-alcoholic, lightly fermented or unfermented cereal-based drink popular across Nigeria. The most common variety, kunun-zaki, is made from millet, sorghum or maize, with ginger, cloves, sweet potato and sometimes tamarind.

ItemDetail
SourceMillet / sorghum / maize
MethodSoak grains overnight, wet-mill with ginger and spices, decant, cook the mix briefly, cool, sieve, add sugar to taste
Active compoundsCarbohydrates, B-vitamins, minerals, gingerol from ginger
Health benefitsEnergy-rich, refreshing, hydrating, mildly probiotic when partially fermented, soothing to the stomach
CautionHighly perishable — must be refrigerated and consumed within 24–48 h; risk of spoilage if poorly handled

6.3 Orange Juice

Fresh orange juice is the world's most consumed fruit juice. It is squeezed from ripe sweet oranges (Citrus sinensis) and is best consumed soon after extraction.

ItemDetail
SourceRipe sweet orange (Yoruba: Osàn)
MethodWash, halve, ream/squeeze, strain, drink fresh or pasteurize
Active compoundsVitamin C (~50 mg/100 mL), folate, potassium, hesperidin (flavonoid)
Health benefitsBoosts immune system, supports skin and gum health, aids iron absorption, good source of antioxidants
CautionNaturally high in fruit sugar; large amounts can affect blood-glucose control in diabetics; acidity can erode teeth if consumed excessively

6.4 Pineapple Juice

Pineapple juice is extracted from the fused mesocarp of Ananas comosus. It has a distinctive sweet-tart flavour and contains a unique enzyme called bromelain.

ItemDetail
SourceRipe pineapple (Yoruba: Ẹdūn)
MethodWash, peel, core, dice, blend or press, strain
Active compoundsVitamin C, manganese, bromelain, carotenoids
Health benefitsAids digestion of proteins (bromelain), anti-inflammatory, supports recovery from injury, boosts immunity
CautionAcidic — may irritate mouth or sensitive stomachs; bromelain can interact with anticoagulant medication

6.5 Quick Comparison & General Tips

DrinkTypeTop BenefitBest Storage
ZoboPlant infusionBlood-pressure support / antioxidantRefrigerate; drink within 2–3 days
Kunu (zaki)Cereal beverageEnergy and hydrationRefrigerate; drink within 24–48 h
Orange juiceFresh fruit juiceVitamin C / immune supportRefrigerate; drink fresh
Pineapple juiceFresh fruit juiceBromelain / digestionRefrigerate; drink fresh
💡 General Healthy-Drinking Tips
  • Drink fruit juice in moderation — one cup (250 mL) per day is enough.
  • Prefer freshly prepared or "100% juice" over fruit drinks.
  • Refrigerate immediately after preparation; do not leave standing for hours.
  • Use clean utensils, water and bottles to prevent contamination.
  • People on medication should consult a health professional before drinking large amounts of zobo, pineapple or grapefruit juice.
🧪 Practical Demonstration — Unit 6

Preparation of Two Traditional Juices

Group A — Zobo Production

  1. Materials: 100 g dried zobo leaves, 2 L water, 30 g ginger, 5 cloves, pineapple peels, sugar to taste.
  2. Wash zobo leaves quickly in clean water to remove dust.
  3. Boil water; add the leaves, ginger, cloves and pineapple peels; simmer 15–20 minutes.
  4. Allow to steep for 30 minutes, sieve through clean muslin cloth.
  5. Sweeten lightly, refrigerate and serve chilled. Record colour, taste and pH.

Group B — Kunun-zaki Production

  1. Materials: 500 g millet (or sorghum), water, 30 g ginger, 5 cloves, 100 g sweet potato (optional), sugar.
  2. Soak millet 6–12 h, drain.
  3. Wet-mill millet with ginger and cloves into a smooth slurry.
  4. Divide slurry into two: cook one half briefly to make a paste; mix with the raw half and stir well.
  5. Sieve through fine cloth, sweeten lightly. Refrigerate. Record consistency, taste and shelf life.

Group C — Fresh Orange & Pineapple Juice (parallel)

  1. Wash, peel and squeeze/blend separately. Strain. Compare yield (% juice by weight).
  2. Conduct sensory comparison among the four traditional juices using a 5-point scale for: colour, aroma, sweetness, sourness, overall acceptability.
📝 Self-Check Quiz — Unit 6
The bioactive enzyme in pineapple juice that aids the digestion of proteins is:
📝 Classwork & Final Assignment — Unit 6

A. Classwork

  1. State the source plant for zobo, kunu, orange juice and pineapple juice.
  2. List two health benefits of each.
  3. Mention one caution associated with each drink.

B. Final Course Project

  • Choose any one fruit juice or traditional beverage of your choice and write a 1500-word case study covering: source plant, common SW Nigerian name, full preparation procedure, ingredients, packaging suggestion, expected shelf life, three health benefits and any cautions.
  • Include at least one labelled diagram (preparation flowchart) and your own designed product label.
Marks: 30 · Counts toward CA · Submit by examination week
COURSE COMPLETE
Congratulations!

You have completed VOS 165 — Introduction to Fruit Juice. From orchard to bottle, from Pasteur's heat treatment to a chilled cup of zobo on a Saturday afternoon, you now understand how fruits become beverages. Take this knowledge forward into entrepreneurship, food science, and good nutrition.