Publication | Open Access
Principal components analysis and age at harvest effect on quality of gari from four elite cassava varieties in Ghana
21
Citations
8
References
2009
Year
EngineeringBotanyFood AnalysisAgricultural EconomicsPrincipal Components AnalysisCrop QualityFood ChemistryElite Cassava VarietiesSustainable AgricultureTitratable AcidityInclude Moisture ContentHealth SciencesCrop ProductionPlant ProductionFood QualityAgricultural ScienceHorticultural CommodityHarvest EffectSeed Processing
Four elite cassava varieties in Ghana released under the local names Afisiafi, Tekbankye, Abasafitaa and Gblemoduade were planted in June and harvested the following year at 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15 months after planting, and processed into gari. The effect that age at harvest had on selected physicochemical properties indicative of gari quality was studied in the four varieties. The parameters studied include moisture content, ash, pH, titratable acidity (% lactic acid), crude fibre, swelling capacity and yield. Moisture was between 9.54 - 11.57% while ash was between 0.88 - 1.39%. Titratable acidity was between 0.85 - 1.62% while pH ranged between 3.58 and 4.21. Swelling capacity was slightly below 3 while yield ranged between 12 and 26%. The four principal components identified were dry matter, extent of fermentation, starch content and elemental composition of the gari. Age at harvest significantly affected (p < 0.05) moisture, pH and bulk density of the gari samples. Varietal effect was not significant.
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