Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7585399 | Food Chemistry | 2018 | 41 Pages |
Abstract
Flesh reddening of 'Friar' plum (Prunus salicina Lindl.) fruit developed rapidly during storage at intermediate temperatures of 5 and 15â¯Â°C in comparison to flesh turning yellow at 25â¯Â°C and almost no colour change at 0â¯Â°C. Thus, modifications of phytochemicals and antioxidant activity during flesh reddening were investigated. Anthocyanins accumulated rapidly in reddening flesh tissue and cyanidin-3-O-glucoside was identified as the absolutely predominant individual anthocyanin. Anthocyanins contributed greatly to the antioxidant activity at 5â¯Â°C, and especially at 15â¯Â°C by combining with non-anthocyanin phenolics, including protocatechuic, syringic, trans-p-coumaric and caffeic acids. Storage at 15â¯Â°C impeded the hydrolysis of sucrose to glucose and fructose, while storage at 5â¯Â°C maintained sucrose and accumulated fructose. Intermediate temperatures altered organic acid compositions helping to produce reasonable SSC/TA ratios. These results would provide a postharvest approach for fruit to meet the consumer's demand for diverse tastes and health promoting effects.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Rui Wang, Limin Wang, Shuzhi Yuan, Qianqian Li, Hanxu Pan, Jiankang Cao, Weibo Jiang,