Publications by authors named "Jovyn Ng"

Article Synopsis
  • The study emphasizes the importance of dietary fiber's structure in promoting bowel health through enhanced fecal bulking and hydration.
  • Researchers created minimally processed vegetable fibers from swede, broccoli, and asparagus using cold water fragmentation and tested their effects in a rat model.
  • The results showed that these natural vegetable fibers significantly outperformed commercial processed fibers and fermentable polysaccharides in both fecal bulking and hydration, highlighting the necessity of consuming a varied diet rich in whole vegetables, fruits, and grains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Substantial differences in softening behaviour can exist between fruit even within the same species. Apple cultivars 'Royal Gala' and 'Scifresh' soften at different rates despite having a similar genetic background and producing similar amounts of ethylene during ripening. An examination of cell wall metabolism from the fruitlet to the ripe stages showed that in both cultivars pectin solubilisation increased during cell expansion, declined at the mature stage and then increased again during ripening.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Solid-state (13)C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was used to compare differences in mobility of the cell wall polysaccharides of 'Scifresh' and 'Royal Gala' apples after 20 weeks of storage. The texture of 'Scifresh' apples was markedly firmer than that of 'Royal Gala' at the end of storage. In a novel approach Two Pulse Phase Modulation (TPPM) decoupling was combined with cross polarisation (CP) and single pulse excitation (SPE) experiments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: There is a paucity of information regarding development of fruit tissue microstructure and changes in the cell walls during fruit growth, and how these developmental processes differ between cultivars with contrasting softening behaviour. In this study we compare two apple cultivars that show different softening rates during fruit development and ripening. We investigate whether these different softening behaviours manifest themselves late during ethylene-induced softening in the ripening phase, or early during fruit expansion and maturation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF