Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4563180 Food Research International 2006 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
In an attempt to study the hard-to-cook defect in Dioscorea dumetorum tubers after harvest, yellow cultivars of trifoliate yam tubers were stored under range of temperatures (15, 30, 45 °C ) and relative humidity (59%, 75%, 86% RH), and then soaked and cooked in distilled water or 5% (w/v) aqueous solution of Na2 EDTA. The hard-to-cook defect was separated into reversible and irreversible components. Results of phytate and lignin analysis led to the conclusion that these components reflect the pectin-phytate mechanism or reversible hardening and the lignification mechanism or irreversible hardening. Modeling of the hardening process indicated that the rate of reversible and irreversible reaction was dependent on storage conditions, however, irreversible hardening rate was generally faster than reversible hardening and then represented the major component of D. dumetorum tubers hardening.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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