“…It piqued the interest of researchers and food manufacturers who were looking for low‐cost bioactive ingredients to replace synthetic additives in the pharmaceutical and food industries (Li & Siddique, 2018). A surprising number of publications on recovering phenolic compounds and bioactive peptides as value‐added molecules for use in the food industry have been published (González Garza et al ., 2017; Aderinola et al ., 2019; Karami et al ., 2019, Karami et al ., 2019a, 2019b; Rodríguez García & Raghavan 2021). Bioactive compounds derived from waste materials have been shown to have a wide range of biological activities, including antioxidant activity (Karami et al ., 2019, Karami et al ., 2019a, 2019b), antihypertensive and anticancer activity (Karami et al ., 2019, Karami et al ., 2019a, 2019b), improving learning and memory property (Chen et al ., 2015), antibacterial activity (Hwang et al ., 2016), etc .…”