Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6404473 | LWT - Food Science and Technology | 2013 | 11 Pages |
â¢Effect of ohmic and conventional blanching on artichoke heads prior to canning.â¢Ohmic heating heats products more quickly and uniformly than conventional method.â¢Ohmic blanching inactivates enzymes faster than conventional blanching.â¢Ohmic blanching preserve colour and softens evenly artichokes.â¢The blanching method affects the nutritional and bioactive compounds in artichokes.
The effect of ohmic (24 V/cm, 80 °C) and conventional hot water (100 °C) blanching on peroxidase (POD) and polyphenol oxidase (PPO) inactivation, colour parameters [L, hue (h), Chroma (C), ÎE*], texture (maximum compression force) as well as total protein and phenolic content of artichoke heads immediately after blanching as well as during storage by canning was investigated.The experimental results have shown that ohmic blanching inactivates both enzymes at lower processing times than conventional blanching, with total inactivation times of 360 s and 480 s, respectively. The colour of the raw product was well preserved after ohmic heating, while after water blanching it changed significantly from a yellow/green to a brownish/green. In addition, when compared to the artichokes blanched by ohmic treatment, the samples treated by the conventional method appeared heterogeneously softened showing a lower softening in the inner region but excessive softening in the outer part.Finally, the results have revealed that the blanching method also affects the nutritional and bioactive compounds in artichokes immediately after blanching and during storage by canning, with the losses in both protein and polyphenolic content in conventionally pre-treated samples being greater than those measured in samples pre-treated by ohmic blanching.