“…Particularly, drying temperature directly influences the changes in the physicochemical properties of foods. Current drying methods include: (1) conventional drying, for example hot-air/oven drying [1][2][3][4][5][6], conventional/low temperature-air drying [6][7][8], vacuum/vacuum oven drying [5,6,[9][10][11], sun drying [6,9,12], under shade drying [9,13], heat pump-dehumidified air drying [2], low-pressure superheated steam drying [1], and freeze drying [2,5,9]; (2) radiation drying such as microwave drying [2,6,12,[14][15][16], infrared drying [3,4,6]; and (3) combined drying or novel drying, for instance, microwave-assisted hot-air drying [3], infrared-combined hot air drying [1,4], hot air-assisted radio frequency drying [3], vacuum-microwave drying [10,17], combined infrared-vacuum drying [18], and combined low-pressure superheated steam drying and far-infrared radiation [19]. Among these drying techniques, conventional drying is simpler, has lower production costs, but is less effective (except for freeze drying), while radiation and novel drying are effective but are more complicated, and have higher production costs.…”