Abstract

In an attempt to investigate the hard-to-cook phenomenon in Dioscorea dumetorum tubers during storage, selected physical and chemical characteristics were monitored. A 3 × 5 factorial experiment with storage conditions (15 °C, 59% RH; 30 °C, 75% RH; 45 °C, 86% RH) and storage period (0, 2, 4, 7 and 14 days) as variables was carried out. Changes in cooked hardness, water absorption, water-holding capacity and solid loss of steeped tubers as well as phytate, total phenols and lignin contents were monitored. Water uptake and solid loss of steeped tubers decreased significantly ( P ⩽ 0.05) with storage period, suggesting that storage affects cell wall membrane permeability of the tubers. Cooked hardness analyses indicated significant difference ( P ⩽ 0.05) between fresh and stored tubers and its rate varied with storage time and storage conditions. Cooked hardness values correlated negatively ( r = −0.922–0.857, P ⩽ 0.05, d.f. = 146) with phytate and total phenols. A multiple mechanism for D. dumetorum tubers hardening is presented which includes phytate loss as a minimal contributor to cooked hardness during the first days of storage and total phenol loss via a lignification-like mechanism as a major contributor.

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