Abstract

Abstract The application of high pressure processing (HPP) has shown its potential to reduce quality losses of many fruit and vegetable products in comparison to other traditional technologies such as cooking. To identify further opportunities of the application of high pressures in vegetable pieces, the sensory perception and correlation to quality parameters were investigated on carrot sticks (used as model product) submitted to high pressure treatments (600 MPa, 2 min) and compared to other traditional treatments such as sous-vide (90 °C, 5 min), cooked (100 °C, 20 min) and unprocessed (raw). The results indicated that HPP carrots were not different from sous-vide carrots in many parameters such as: sweetness, green flavour and crunchy texture. Furthermore, high pressure carrots showed significantly higher intensity perception of orange colour and fibrousnesses to the rest of the treatments, while similar brightness to cooked carrots and green odour to raw. Throughout 14 days of storage at 4 °C, there was clear evidence that HPP samples could be preserved better in comparison to the rest of the treatments by not presenting any production of acetic acid (used as quality deterioration reference). Overall, sensory evaluation showed correlations to many quality measurements in this study, indicating similarities in hardness versus crunchiness perception and juiciness versus moisture perception between HPP and sous-vide samples. GC/MS and GC/MS-O results were also in agreement in most cases when identifying carrot volatile changes between the different treatments and the identification of the development of new compounds formed. Finally, the tissue structure observed by using Cryo-SEM microscopy, supported the similarities (between HPP and sous-vide) and differences (between treatments) of the quality parameters analysed in this research. Industrial Relevance Previous reports on HPP for food applications indicated that this technology will only be commercially successful if added value is achieved or if the product characteristic can be retained at a higher level as compared to thermally/traditionally processed foods. This work provides information on textural and chemical (volatile) changes as well as the sensorial perception of carrots which have undergone high pressure processing, as well as how those changes compare to the quality of both raw and thermally processed carrots. These results may be generally applicable to what could be expected to happen to other ‘hard’ tissue vegetable products produced by high pressure processing, over a refrigerated storage time of 14 days.

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