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| Authors: | A.R. Vicente, A.R. Chaves, P.M. Civello, G.A. Martinez |
| Keywords: | Strawberry fruit, Postharvest, Heat-treatments, modified atmospheres. |
Abstract:
Strawberries (Fragaria ananassa cv Selva) were put in bags with different
permeability to CO2, O2 and H2O vapor, heat
treated in an air oven (45°C, 3 h) and stored at 0°C for 0, 7 or 14 days.
After
the treatment, the fruit was maintained at 20°C for 48 h.
The effect of heat
treatment and films on fruit firmness, superficial color, anthocyanin content,
and decay was analyzed.
Heat-treated fruit maintained firmness and was less
susceptible to fungal attack than the control.
Superficial color development
and anthocyanin accumulation were delayed in the case of heat-treated fruit.
When the fruits were treated and packed in bags that retain CO2, the
effects were enhanced and fruit postharvest life was extended.
These results show
that the use of heat treatments in combination with refrigerated storage could
be a good alternative to keep strawberry fruit quality.
Additional improvement
can be obtained by performing the heat treatment in bags that allow the CO2
produced as a consequence of the enhanced respiration rate during treatment to
be retained.
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