FROZEN STRAWBERRYQUALITY ENHANCEMENT USING HIGH HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE AND VACUUM INFUSION WITH PECTIN METHYLESTERASE AND CALCIUM CHLORIDE SOLUTION
Fresh strawberry ( Fragaria x ananassa ) is a delicious fruit that is an excellent source of micronutrients and an array of beneficial phytochemicals. Emerging technologies like high pressure freezing and thawing have gained interest recently due to their ability to preserve the structure of the foo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | African journal of food, agriculture, nutrition, and development : AJFAND agriculture, nutrition, and development : AJFAND, 2021-08, Vol.21 (1) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fresh strawberry ( Fragaria x ananassa ) is a delicious fruit that is
an excellent source of micronutrients and an array of beneficial
phytochemicals. Emerging technologies like high pressure freezing and
thawing have gained interest recently due to their ability to preserve
the structure of the food during storage, albeit the possible
shortcomings of degradation of texture and sensory quality. In this
study, the effects of high hydrostatic pressure freezing and thawing on
the physical quality attributes (texture, drip loss and Degree of
Methylation (DM)) of strawberry were investigated. Strawberry samples
were infused in a vacuum using pectin methyl esterase (PME) and CaCl2
solution at 170 hPa pressure for 5 min at room temperature to improve
textural integrity; infused with distilled water; and another group of
samples further incubated at 40°C for 20 min. Fresh samples and
non-pretreated samples were also studied. All the samples were
subjected to high pressure freezing and thawing processes at 200 MPa
and the effect of the processing conditions on texture were evaluated.
The high pressure processed samples were compared with conventionally
frozen and thawed samples. Pectin methyl esterase, CaCl2 infusion and
incubation gave a relative hardness of 1.5 pretreatment compared to
water only infused at 0.5. The CaCl2and PME-infused samples had a
higher relative hardness after one day of storage at -18°C
compared to non-pretreated and water-infused samples at 0.3 compared to
0.1, respectively. Pretreated, water-infused, and PME with
CaCl2-infused samples showed no significant difference in hardness when
measured immediately after conventional thawing and high pressure
induced thawing HPIT but are the former are a third less hard compared
to the latter upon storage after 3 hours and three months. Galacturonic
acid per mg of Alcohol insoluble residues AIR sample for the fresh
strawberry was 0.002±2.699E-05 and 0.002±1.070E-05moles for
the one-day vs. three months storage, respectively, for samples
conventionally frozen and thawed in duplicate experiments. Therefore, a
combination of high-pressure shift freezing (HPSF) with PME and
CaCl2infusion improved the texture of the strawberry compared to those
that were not pretreated, and gained weight by 15%. The PME and
CaCl2-infused strawberry showed less degradation than the
non-pretreated and water-infused during both long- and short-time
frozen storage. Conventional freezing processes caused more degradation
compa |
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ISSN: | 1684-5358 |