11 research outputs found
Impact of Alternative Thermal and Non-Thermal Processing on the Enzymatic Activity of Papaya and Strawberry Nectars and Their Blends
Pectin methylesterase (PME) in papaya nectar results in undesirable gel formation and peroxidase (POD) in strawberry nectar leads to nutrient loss, browning, and off-flavor production. Because of this, the effect of alternative processing techniques including ultra high temperature (UHT, 20-135°C, 1-3 s), high pressure processing (HPP, 20 or 60°C, 200-600 MPa) and irradiation (0-10 kGy) on PME and POD activity in papaya and strawberry nectar and their respective blends were compared to traditional thermal processing (80-130°C, 0-10 min). Traditional thermal (110°C, 5 min, 71.5% reduction) and UHT (110°C, 1-3 s, 98.0% reduction) processing were able to sufficiently reduce PME activity and prevent gel formation in papaya nectar. PME reduction was enhanced by synergistic reductions in nectar blends after UHT at 80°C. HPP was unable to prevent gel formation in papaya nectar, with enhanced activity at 400 MPa. Exposure of a blend 50P:50S to 10 kGy irradiation prevented gel formation. UHT enhanced POD activity at 110°C and synergistic reductions resulted for POD activity in nectar blends after irradiation. These findings highlight the benefits of alternative processing in reducing enzyme activity in fruit nectars and nectar blends
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In-Field Thermal Treatment of Huanglongbing (HLB) infected Trees
To decrease Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus titer and increase the productive life of infected trees, thermal treatment of orange trees was proposed. A moving greenhouse was developed to cover single trees during the summer of 2012. Four trees (~ 2.5×2.5×2.5 m) were treated, one tree per day, during the months of September (trees T1 through T3) and October (tree T4). From each tree, three symptomatic branches were sampled to determine microbial kill before (0 h) and at 2, 3, 4, and 5 h during the treatment. Temperature distribution throughout the canopy and on the sampled branches was also recorded. Maximal temperatures in the ranges 50 to 53 °C were reached at the top (2.4 m) of the canopy whereas at the bottom of the canopy (i.e., 0.6 m) maximal temperatures ranged from 36 to 43 °C. Due to varied micro-meteorological conditions during the treatment, temperatures of the T1 through T4 sampled branches reached above 40⁰C for 217, 166, 35, 228 min, respectively. For T1, T2 and T4 trees, average temperatures of the sampled branches reached above 45 °C for 87, 35, and 49 min or more. Attempts to quantitatively determine microbial kill by determining percent live bacteria at selected time intervals during thermal treatment was unreliable due to the very uneven distribution of initial proportion of live-to-dead bacteria and analysis variability. However, overall, after thermal treatments, live microbial populations decreased. These findings indicate that adequate thermal treatment of trees required forced convection air flow and supplemental heating