Abstract

SummaryAfter‐cooking darkening (ACD) phenomenon occurs when potato tubers develop greyish dark colour after boiling, frying, or steaming. The pigment responsible for ACD is a complex of chlorogenic acid and iron, which is formed during cooking and oxidised during cooling. The evaluation of ACD is thus based either on the amount of chlorogenic acid in raw tubers or the greyish colour intensity on cooked tuber surfaces. This study introduced a new method, the digital imaging method, for evaluation of potato ACD. The comparison of this new method with visual evaluation and the measurement of chlorogenic acid using HPLC were also presented. The digital imaging method is based on the direct measurement of the degree of dark colour on cut tuber surfaces, expressed by pixel levels. The new method is faster, more reliable and simpler when compared with any methods presently used. It is particularly applicable to handling large sample numbers.

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