Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9487416 | Food Research International | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Degradation kinetics of anthocyanins was studied in sour cherry nectar, pomegranate and strawberry juices at high hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) concentrations (9.31-27.92 mmol lâ1) at 10-30 °C and in only sour cherry nectar at low H2O2 concentrations (0.23-2.33 mmol lâ1) at 20 °C. Degradation of anthocyanins followed the first-order reaction kinetics. Sour cherry anthocyanins were the most resistant to H2O2, followed by pomegranate and strawberry anthocyanins. Degradation of anthocyanins was also studied in sour cherry nectar and pomegranate juice in the presence of ascorbic acid at 60 and 80 mg lâ1 concentrations at 20 °C. At 80 mg level, ascorbic acid significantly accelerated the degradation of anthocyanins in sour cherry nectar at 4.65, 6.98 and 9.31 mmol lâ1 H2O2 concentrations. In contrast, ascorbic acid at both 60 and 80 mg levels protected the anthocyanins from degradation by H2O2 in pomegranate juice.
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Authors
M. Ãzkan, A. YemenicioÄlu, B. CemeroÄlu,