The aim of this work was to determine the effect of hot-air convective drying (D), osmotic dehydration (OD), osmotic dehydration + drying (OD + D) and freeze-drying (FD) on chemical and sensorial characteristics of chestnut slices. Proximate composition, sugars, organic acids and lipid profiles were determined along 60 days of storage. Immediately after production, D and FD samples had similar proximate compositions, both with higher fat and protein contents than the osmodehydrated ones, the latter with increased sucrose contents. FD was the method that better preserved starch, amylose, ascorbic and citric acid molecules at day 0, while D originated samples with higher glucose and fructose contents. Along storage, the major variations were ...