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Research Project
GeoBioSciences GeoTechnologies and GeoEngineering
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Publications
Quality changes of carrots under different frozen storage conditions: A kinetic study
Publication . Gonçalves, Elsa M.; Abreu, Marta; Pinheiro, Joaquina; Brandão, Teresa R. S.; Silva, Cristina L.M.
In order to improve the overall quality of frozen carrots (Daucus carota L.), the degradation kinetics of several attributes were quantified during frozen storage under isothermal and nonisothermal conditions. The experimental results showed that the analyzed quality parameters were significantly affected by both tested frozen regimes. For both storage conditions, the degradation of color parameters and drip loss followed zero-order kinetics, and the texture was successfully described by a fractional kinetic model. A first-order kinetic model was adequate in describing total vitamin C decay under isothermal storage conditions. The storage temperature effect was adequately modeled by the Arrhenius law. The carrots shelf life under isothermal
storage conditions of −18°C, using a threshold of 50% vitamin C content, will be of 118 days. Practical applications: The objective of this work was to evaluate the degradation kinetics of several quality attributes of carrots when subjected to various frozen storage temperature conditions that may occur along the distribution chain. The quality attributes degradation mechanisms are governed by chemical and/or physical changes that need to be systematically evaluated for further incorporation into product and process designs. The achieved results will be an insight to help manufacturers to predict and optimize products quality and determine its shelf life.
Effect of heat treatment on smoothie quality by response surface methodology
Publication . Pinheiro, Joaquina; Santos, Diana I.; Gonçalves, Elsa M.; Abreu, Marta; Moldão-Martins, Margarida
Smoothies are a popular and convenient way for to consume bioactive compounds from fruits and vegetables such as total phenolics, carotenoids and flavonoids, with the preservation treatment being an important action to guarantee the safety and extension of shelf-life. The main goal of this study was to evaluate the impact of heat treatment (HT) on smoothie prepared with “Fuji “apple (41%), pineapple (31%), cabbage (8%), pumpkin (10%) and banana (10%), by response surface methodology (RSM), where the temperature (70–100 °C) and treatment time (0.5–10.5 min), were the dependent variables. After optimization of HT conditions, a validation assay was performed to guarantee the minimal changes on color and reduction of 90% of polyphenoloxidase enzyme (PPO). Antioxidant activity (Ferric reducing antioxidant power assay (FRAP), DPPH, ABTS),
total phenolics content (TPC), pH and solids soluble content were also analyzed. Predicted models of color parameters (L*, a*, ºh) and PPO enzymatic activity were found to be significant (p < 0.05) with regression coefficients (R2) of 0.84, 0.86, 0.92 and 0.97, respectively. From the RSM-generated model, the HT conditions that ensure a minimal green loss of smoothie and inactivation of PPO enzyme was at 85 °C over 7 min. In the validation study, these conditions were tested and proved to be sufficient to achieve the main goals. In the heat-treated smoothie, increases in TPC (10%) and antioxidant capacity (ABTS: 50%, DPPH: 17%, FRAP: 13%) were attained. This study demonstrated that RSM was efficient to select the optimal conditions of HT and improve the important quality properties that influence the product quality and the potential consumer’s health (TPC and antioxidant capacity).
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Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Funding programme
6817 - DCRRNI ID
Funding Award Number
UIDP/04035/2020