Abstract

Yerba mate shows social and economic importance for the Southern Latin American countries due to its easy production and large market range. However, there is a problem to harvest the yerba mate at the correct period and to store it until processing and marketing. Thus, the aim of this paper was to evaluate the interaction among the storage in controlled atmosphere, effect of cultivation form and shelf life period on yerba mate quality after long-term controlled atmosphere storage. The experiment was conducted in a factorial arrangement (3 controlled atmosphere conditions × 2 cultivation forms × 4 weeks of shelf life). Native yerba mate, stored under controlled atmosphere, showed higher chlorophyll concentration as compared to the cultivated one. Carotenoid concentration increased up to the third week of shelf life and thereafter remained constant, if the yerba mate was stored under ambient conditions. Oxygen partial pressure lowering allows long-term yerba mate storage, keeping its quality during four shelf life weeks at 20 °C. Controlled atmosphere is an efficient technique for yerba mate quality keeping during long-term storage and shelf life, allowing the harvest of the raw material at the correct period and the maintenance of its quality until processing and marketing. The cultivation form has a significant effect on the storage and shelf life potential of yerba mate stored under controlled atmosphere.

Highlights

  • Yerba mate (Ilex paraguarienses) is a native plant of the Latin America, used for drinks called “chimarão” and “tererê” in Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina and Uruguay (Heck and Mejia 2007)

  • Group 1 is composed by yerba mate stored under ambient condition, independently of the cultivation form; group 2 is composed by cultivated yerba mate stored either under 0.5 or 1.0 kPa O2 and group 3 is composed by native yerba mate stored either under 0.5 or 1.0 kPa O2

  • These results show that yerba mate stored in ambient conditions, either native or cultivated, had similar behavior during storage and shelf life

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Summary

Introduction

Yerba mate (Ilex paraguarienses) is a native plant of the Latin America, used for drinks called “chimarão” and “tererê” in Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina and Uruguay (Heck and Mejia 2007). Studies found that the use of laminated (Cabral-Malheiros et al 2010) and BOPP/PEBD packets (Valduga et al 2005) maintain higher yerba mate quality as compared to paper packets. This storage technology did not solve the problem, once, with this storage technique, yerba mate quality decreases significantly after 12 weeks of storage (Cabral-Malheiros et al 2010). It is important the development of a technology that allows harvesting yerba mate at the correct period and store it until industrialization and/or marketing

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