Abstract

Vitamin C loss was compared in homogenized raw broccoli, potatoes, spinach, strawberries, oranges, and tomatoes; baked potatoes; steamed broccoli and spinach; and pasteurized orange juice after storage under residual nitrogen under refrigeration, and frozen at conventional (−10 to −20°C) and ultra-low (<−55°C) temperatures for 1, 3, and 7 days. Additional foods (cantaloupe, green sweet peppers, collard greens, clementines) were monitored for 3–4 years at <−55°C. Total ascorbic acid was quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography and detailed quality control measures. No decrease occurred in any of the foods after 7 days at <−55°C. Under refrigeration the largest decreases were in raw spinach and broccoli, averaging (mg/100g) 9.5 (29%) and 33.1 (29%), respectively, after 1 day and 31.0 and 77.0 after 7 days (94% and 68%, respectively). With conventional freezing, vitamin C was stable for 7 days in most of the products studied; minor losses occurred in raw spinach and broccoli after 1 day but were substantial after 3 days, 6.9mg/100g (23%) and 17.0mg/100g (15%), respectively; and 7 days (13.1 and 32.0mg/100g). For homogenates stored long-term at <−55°C, vitamin C loss occurred in only cantaloupe, collard greens, and one sample of raw potatoes, all before 50 weeks.

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