Publication | Open Access
Additive Effects of Postharvest Calcium and Heat Treatment on Reducing Decay and Maintaining Quality in Apples
94
Citations
27
References
1994
Year
EngineeringReducing DecayAgricultural EconomicsAdditive EffectsHorticultural ScienceCacl 2Food PreservationPressure InfiltrationFruit SciencePost-harvest PhysiologyFood QualityHeat TreatmentFood StorageQuality DeteriorationFood SafetyHealth Sciences
`Golden Delicious' apples (Malus domestics Borkh.) were treated with heat or CaCl 2 solutions or a combination thereof to determine the effects of these treatments on decay and quality of fruit in storage. Heat treatment at 38C for 4 days, pressure infiltration with 2% or 4% solutions of CaCl 2 , or a combination of both, with heat following CaCl 2 treatment affected decay and firmness during 6 months of storage at 0C. The heat treatment alone reduced decay caused by Botrytis cinerea (Pers.:Fr.) by ≈30%, while heat in combination with a 2% CaC1 2 solution reduced decay by ≈60 %. Calcium chloride solutions of 2% or 4% alone reduced decay by 40 % and 60 %, respectively. Heat treatments, either alone or in combination with CaC1 2 treatments, maintained firmness (80 N) best, followed by fruit infiltrated with 2% or 4% solutions of CaCl 2 alone (70 N) and the nontreated controls (66 N). Instron Magness-Taylor and Instron compression test curves show that heat-treated fruit differed qualitatively and quantitatively from nonheated fruit. Heat treatment did not increase the amount of infiltrated Ca bound to the cell wall significantly, and a combination of heat treatment after CaCl 2 infiltration increased surface injury over those fruit heated or infiltrated with CaCl 2 solutions alone.
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