کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4518457 | 1625013 | 2013 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

In order to develop practical sea freight and marketing options for high quality red capsicums, we have investigated washing treatments that can minimize deterioration when fruit are subsequently stored under high humidity packaging conditions, at cool (6–8 °C) and warm (20 °C) temperatures. In small-scale trials using vented plastic bags to provide high humidity, fruit washed with unheated high-pressure water (517 kPa) had reduced incidence of flesh rots and deterioration of the calyx and stem compared to controls (unwashed or passed through a commercial packing line) or hot water drenched fruit (55 °C for 30 s) following a high humidity storage regime of 2 weeks at 6–8 °C and a further 14 d at 20 °C. In a more extensive trial where 5 kg boxes of fruit were used as replicates, washing with high-pressure water, packing in unperforated plastic box-liners and storing at 6–8 °C for 2 weeks, then 21 d at 20 °C resulted in 84% acceptability. In contrast, acceptability of fruit treated in a commercial packing line stored under regular (uncontrolled humidity) conditions or inside box liners (high relative humidity) declined rapidly at 20 °C after 2 weeks cool storage, with final acceptabilities of 10% and 39% after 21 d, respectively. We conclude that high-pressure water washing is an effective cleaning step, permitting high humidity to be used to prevent shrivel during cool-storage and subsequent ambient conditions, while minimizing the incidence of flesh rots or calyx/stem deterioration. Extended capsicum quality in high humidity at room temperature suggests that (a) cool-storage during transport to some markets may not be necessary if fruit are cleaned to a high standard and (b) fruit could remain within a box liner right up until the product is displayed on the supermarket shelves.
► High-pressure water washing is an effective cleaning step for red capsicums.
► Treated fruit have reduced deterioration under high humidity cool/ambient conditions.
► Key elements are a 517 kPa wash and packing in unperforated box liners.
► Integration into a standard packing line would be relatively straightforward.
Journal: Postharvest Biology and Technology - Volume 81, July 2013, Pages 73–80