The combined effect of antibrowning dips and controlled atmosphere storage on fresh-cut "Rojo Brillante" persimmon quality was investigated. Persimmon slices were dipped in 10 g L ascorbic acid, 10 g L citric acid or water and were stored in different controlled atmospheres at 5 ℃. Controlled atmosphere conditions were 21 kPa O + 10 kPa CO (Atm-B), 21 kPa O + 20 kPa CO (Atm-C), 5 kPa O + 10 kPa CO (Atm-D) and 5 kPa O in the absence of CO (Atm-E). Air (Atm-A) was used as a control. Atmospheres with high CO concentrations induced darkening, associated with a flesh disorder known as "internal flesh browning". Only the samples placed in Atm-E, and treated with 10 g L ascorbic acid or 10 g L citric acid, controlled enzymatic browning, reduced firmness loss and prevented the "internal flesh browning" disorder. The maximum limit of marketability was achieved in the samples treated with 10 g L citric acid and stored in Atm-E for nine storage days at 5 ℃. The total vitamin C, free radical scavenging activity, total phenolic content and total carotenoids of the fresh-cut "Rojo Brillante" persimmons were affected by maturity stage at harvest, whereas antibrowning dips and controlled atmosphere storage had no clear effect.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1082013216652800 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!