1. Quality changes and shelf-life prediction of a fresh fruit and vegetables purple smoothie
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional, Gobierno de Panamá, Grupo de Postrecolección y Refrigeración (GPR‐UPCT), González Tejedor, Gerardo Anibal, Martínez Hernández, Ginés Benito, Garre Pérez, Alberto, Egea Larrosa, José Alberto, Fernández Escámez, Pablo Salvador, Artés Hernández, Francisco de Asís, Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional, Gobierno de Panamá, Grupo de Postrecolección y Refrigeración (GPR‐UPCT), González Tejedor, Gerardo Anibal, Martínez Hernández, Ginés Benito, Garre Pérez, Alberto, Egea Larrosa, José Alberto, Fernández Escámez, Pablo Salvador, and Artés Hernández, Francisco de Asís
- Abstract
The sensory, microbial and bioactive quality changes of untreated (CTRL) and mild heat−treated (HT; 90 ºC/45 s) smoothies were studied and modelled throughout storage (5, 15 and 25 ºC). The overall acceptability was better preserved in HT samples being highly correlated (hierarchical clustering) with the flavour. The sensory quality data estimated smoothie shelf−life (CTRL/HT) of 18/55 (at 5 ºC), 4.5/12 (at 15 ºC), 2.4/5.8 (at 25 ºC) days. The yeast and moulds growth rate was lower in HT compared to CTRL while a lag phase for mesophiles/psychrophiles was observed in HT−5/15 ºC. HT and 5 ºC−storage stabilized the phenolics content. FRAP reported the best correlation (R2=0.94) with the studied bioactive compounds, followed by ABTS (R2=0.81) while DPPH was the total antioxidant capacity method with the lowest adjustment (R2=0.49). Conclusively, modelling was used to estimate the shelf−life of a smoothie based on quality retention after a short time−high temperature heat treatment that better preserved microbial and nutritional quality during storage.
- Published
- 2017