Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6399413 Food Research International 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Pulsed light (PL) and Thermosonication (TS) were applied alone or in combination using a continuous system to study their effect on Escherichia coli inactivation in apple juice. Selected quality attributes (pH, °Brix, colour (L, a, b, ΔE), non-enzymatic browning (NEBI) and antioxidant activity (TEAC)) were also evaluated pre- and post-processing. Two PL (360 μs, 3 Hz) treatments were selected and the juice exposed to energy dosages of 4.03 J/cm2 ('low' (L)) and 5.1 J/cm2 ('high' (H)) corresponding to 51.5 and 65.4 J/mL, respectively. The juice was also processed by TS (24 kHz, 100 μm) at 40 °C for 2.9 min (L) or 50 °C for 5 min (H), corresponding to 1456 and 2531 J/ml energy inputs, respectively. The effect of the resulting four energy levels and sequence (PL + TS and TS + PL) was studied. When the technologies were applied individually the maximum reduction achieved was 2.7 and 4.9 log CFU/mL (for TS (H) and PL (H) respectively), while most of the combined treatments achieved reductions in the vicinity of 6 log CFU/mL, showing an additive effect for both technologies when acting in combination, regardless of the sequence applied. All treatments significantly changed the colour of apple juice and the sequence in which the technologies were applied affected colour significantly (P < 0.05). The energy level applied did not affect any of the measured quality attributes.

► Study of combinations of non-thermal technologies for apple juice preservation. ► When applied alone pulsed light or themosonication gave insufficient microbial kill. ► Selected pulsed light and thermosonication combinations gave appropriate kill. ► Sequence of application did not influence microbial kill. ► Colour of juices was affected by the combined treatments.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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