| Literature DB >> 27542502 |
Vanderlei Both1, Fabio Rodrigo Thewes2, Auri Brackmann2, Rogerio de Oliveira Anese3, Daniele de Freitas Ferreira4, Roger Wagner4.
Abstract
The effects of dynamic controlled atmosphere (DCA) storage based on chlorophyll fluorescence (DCA-CF) and respiratory quotient (DCA-RQ) on the quality and volatile profile of 'Royal Gala' apple were evaluated. DCA storage reduces ACC (1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate) oxidase activity, ethylene production and respiration rate of apples stored for 9months at 1.0°C plus 7days at 20°C, resulting in higher flesh firmness, titratable acidity and lesser physiological disorders, and provided a higher proportion of healthy fruit. Storage in a regular controlled atmosphere gave higher levels of key volatiles (butyl acetate, 2-methylbutyl acetate and hexyl acetate), as compared to fruit stored under DCA-CF, but fruit stored under DCA-RQ 1.5 and RQ 2.0 also showed higher amounts of key volatile compounds, with increment in ethanol and ethyl acetate, but far below the odour threshold. Storage in DCA-CF reduces fruit ester production, especially 2-methylbutyl acetate, which is the most important component of 'Royal Gala' apple flavour.Entities:
Keywords: Aroma; Chlorophyll fluorescence; Ethylene production; Flesh firmness; Malus domestica; Physiological disorders
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27542502 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.08.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514