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Impact of turning, pod storage and fermentation time on microbial ecology and volatile composition of cocoa beans

Authors :
Hamdouche, Yasmine
Meile, Jean-Christophe
Lebrun, Marc
Guehi, Tagro Simplice
Boulanger, Renaud
Teyssier, Corinne
Montet, Didier
Hamdouche, Yasmine
Meile, Jean-Christophe
Lebrun, Marc
Guehi, Tagro Simplice
Boulanger, Renaud
Teyssier, Corinne
Montet, Didier
Source :
Food Research International
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Cocoa quality depends on several parameters, such as cocoa variety, environmental growth conditions, cultivation technique, and post-harvest treatments applied to coca beans. In this work, we studied the impact of cocoa post-harvest processing on both microbial communities structure and volatile composition. Cocoa beans samples were fermented in wooden boxes in Ivory Coast at different time intervals with turning and without turning, and derived from pods stored for two different duration times. Cocoa beans were analyzed using a molecular fingerprinting method (PCR-DGGE) in order to detect variations in microbial communities' structure; this global analysis was coupled to SPME-GC–MS for assessing cocoa volatile profiles. The results showed that the main parameter that influenced microbial communities structure was fermentation time, followed by turning, whereas, pods storage duration had a minor impact. Similar results were obtained for aromatic profile, except for pods storage duration that significantly affected volatile compound production. Global statistical analysis using Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA), showed the relationship between microbial communities and volatile composition. Furthermore, this study allowed the identification of discriminating microbial and chemical markers of cocoa post-harvest processing.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Food Research International
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1366791862
Document Type :
Electronic Resource