Abstract

The effect of pre-heating fresh strawberries (hot break) and the use of refrigerated temperatures prior to pasteurization on the stability of anthocyanins, vitamin C, color and polyphenol oxidase (PPO) activity during storage (42 days at 35 °C) of strawberry puree was studied. Hot break resulted in 20% residual PPO activity and caused 10% anthocyanin degradation, whereas vitamin C was unaffected. After mashing, purees were stored at 4 °C and 25 °C for 3 h. During this period, anthocyanins and PPO activity remained constant independently of the processing history but ascorbic acid was oxidized faster at 25 °C. Pasteurization caused complete inactivation of PPO, reduction of anthocyanins (25%), of a* value (6%) and of vitamin C (50%). Neither partial inactivation of PPO early in the processing (hot break) nor the use of refrigeration prior to pasteurization had a positive effect on color and anthocyanin stability of strawberry puree during subsequent storage, suggesting that PPO-derived reaction products formed during processing have a very limited impact on color degradation during shelf-life. • Different strawberry puree manufacturing processing conditions were evaluated. • Hot break did not improve color stability during further processing and storage. • Refrigeration prior to pasteurization prevented ascorbic acid oxidation. • PPO reactions before pasteurization do not affect color degradation during storage. • “Impact of processing and storage conditions on color stability of strawberry puree: the role of PPO reactions revisited”.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call