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Characteristics of Maple Syrup Processed from Bleach-Treated Sap

Authors :
Maria Franca Morselli
Kelly L. Baggett
Mary Lynn Whalen
Source :
Journal of food protection. 48(3)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Recently an undefined off-flavor was detected in syrup produced from sap flowing from tubing systems cleaned with bleach. To identify if bleach was the source of the off-flavor, samples of maple sap, to which various concentrations of sodium hypochlorite (a common sanitizing solution) were added, were processed to syrup. Three tasters detected off-flavors in all experimental syrups, except the control, and associated them with the sodium and chloride level. An off-flavor was described as "salty" with a minimum sodium level of 2,500 ppm and a minimum chloride level of 3,930 ppm and an off-flavor called "undefined" was detected in syrups with a minimum sodium level of 139 ppm and chloride level of 380 ppm. A dramatic two-color-grade change occurred in syrup produced from sap with the highest bleach-to-sap ratio, and was associated with a pH decrease and invert sugar increase.

Details

ISSN :
19449097
Volume :
48
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of food protection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5b6d149cd6ddb2ce8c23a4edd0e99d7c