Publication | Closed Access
Effect of Lipid Type and Amount of Edible Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose‐lipid Composite Coatings Used to Protect Postharvest Quality of Mandarins cv. Fortune
99
Citations
26
References
2002
Year
Food ChemistryEdible FilmWeight LossLipid TypeEdible PackagingMandarins CvLow Oxygen PermeabilityFood AnalysisFood PreservationPostharvest QualityFood EngineeringFood ProcessingFood QualityFood TechnologyFood SafetyFinal ThicknessHealth Sciences
ABSTRACT: ‘Fortune’ mandarin oranges were coated with edible hydroxypropyl methylcellulose‐lipid composite coatings. The coatings consisted of beeswax, carnauba wax, or shellac, at 2 lipid contents (20% and 60%). Weight loss of coated mandarins decreased significantly as lipid content increased. Beeswax (60%) emulsions were associated with the lowest weight loss. Coated fruit had higher internal CO 2 , lower internal O 2 , and higher ethanol contents than uncoated fruit. At 20% lipid content, internal O 2 was lower and ethanol content was higher than at 60% lipid content, which could be related to the low oxygen permeability of hydroxypropyl methylcellulose and the higher viscosity of these emulsions that could have affected final thickness.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1