Abstract

This study investigates the effect of high hydrostatic pressure, also known as high pressure processing (HPP), on microbial inactivation and changes in physicochemical characteristics of carrot-orange juice blends at different pH values. HPP conditions (200–400 MPa, up to 5 m) were evaluated to reach at least 5-log inactivation of L. innocua (ATCC 51742) in each blend. HPP at 300 MPa for 2 m, 400 MPa for 1 m, and 400 MPa for 3 m achieved more than 6-log reduction of L. innocua in pH 4, pH 5, and pH 6 blends, respectively. Ascorbic acid (16–45 mg/100g), total carotenoid (66–241 mg/L), and total phenolic (30–44 mg/L) contents did not significantly change after HPP compared to the corresponding untreated blends. The natural microbiota (i.e. aerobic mesophilic bacteria) was kept below 2-log CFU/mL for 28 d of storage. pH and total soluble solids remarkably changed for untreated blends in 10 d while HPP-treated blends were more stable during 28 d. Color attributes (L*, a*, b*) were retained after HPP and during storage. This study identified less intense high pressure processes for carrot-orange juice blends compared to commercially applied pressure levels (i.e. 600 MPa) to produce microbiologically stable blends with preserved quality attributes depending on pH and blend proportion.

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