Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6405794 LWT - Food Science and Technology 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The aim of this preliminary study was to evaluate the potential applicability of high-pressure homogenization (HPH) for the production of banana juices. To this purpose, a prototype equipment working up to 400 MPa and a lab-scale homogenizer working up to 150 MPa were used. Temperature, microbial load, pectate lyase activity, colour and viscosity of the samples homogenized at increasing pressure were evaluated. Pressures higher than 200 MPa were needed to obtain 4 log unit reduction of total mesophilic bacteria and pectate lyase inactivation. Following HPH, banana juice resulted brighter and less viscous than the untreated one. Data suggest that HPH treatments could be a reliable technological alternative to conventional heat treatments for the production of added-value fruit juices. However, the homogenization design could play a critical role in affecting the product quality attributes. In fact, homogenization performed at the same operative pressure by using different equipment leads to different effects on product quality.

► High-pressure homogenization can be applied for fruit juice production. ► Microbial and enzymatic inactivation can be obtained. ► The homogenised fruit juices show lower viscosity and better colour.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
Authors
, , , , ,