Abstract
AbstractThe effects of harvest maturity and ripening on the chemical composition and sensory characteristics of ‘McIntosh’ and ‘Spartan’ apple juice were evaluated. Juice was extracted from fruit harvested at seven weekly intervals beginning 3–4 weeks before commercial harvest and from fruit held in air storage (1°C) for 1 to 3 months. Internal ethylene concentration and starch index were used as maturity indices. Principal component analysis of juice data (pH. titratable acidity, organic acids, soluble solids, sugars, phenols, turbidity, and Hunterlab colour) showed a distinctive maturity effect on the characteristics of juice extracted from fruit immediately after harvest or after storage. Triangle testing showed aroma and flavour differences in both ‘McIntosh’ and ‘Spartan’ to be first discernable when ethylene was first detected (internal ethylene concentration ≥ 0.1 μl litre−1) and starch hydrolysis evident (starch index 3.0–5.0 for ‘McIntosh’, 1.5–3.0 for ‘Spartan’), or after 2–3 months of air storage. Sensory profiling of fruity aroma, total aroma, fruit flavour by mouth, sweetness, and sourness in the juices showed increased fruitiness and sweetness and decreased sourness with advancing maturity.
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