Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas

The behaviour during storage at 20 °C without any controlled atmosphere of two different varieties of dessert bananas from the Musa cavendish AAA group and the Musa paradisiaca L. AAB group was studied. Changes in instrumental colour and texture, and in a number of a sensory attributes ("green colour", "yellow colour", "colour uniformity" and "quantity of dark spots" of banana peel and "pulp spots", "over-ripe zones", "hardness", "ripe taste", "sweetness", "astringency" and "central fibrosity") by a descriptive sensory panel, and acceptability by a consumer panel of the two varieties over storage were analysed. During storage, the change in peel colour from green to yellow was gradual in the M. cavendish samples, whereas the M. paradisiaca variety presented a different pattern, remaining green for the first 8 days and then changing rapidly to a yellow tone from day 12 onwards. While the flesh texture of the M. cavendish type bananas softened quite rapidly during storage, it evolved more slowly in the M. paradisiaca variety and there was little variation in the flesh hardness values over the storage time. Maximum sensory acceptability in the M. cavendish samples was found at 8-12 days' storage, for 90% of consumers, but did not rise above 50% in the M. paradisiaca variety.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Salvador, Ana, Sanz Taberner, Teresa, Fiszman, Susana
Other Authors: Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología, CICYT (España)
Format: artículo biblioteca
Published: Elsevier BV 2007-03
Subjects:Bananas, Musa cavendish AAA group, Musa paradisiaca AAB group, Ripening, Colour, Texture, Acceptability,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/333035
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spelling dig-iata-es-10261-3330352023-08-10T10:10:11Z Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas Salvador, Ana Sanz Taberner, Teresa Fiszman, Susana Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología, CICYT (España) Bananas Musa cavendish AAA group Musa paradisiaca AAB group Ripening Colour Texture Acceptability The behaviour during storage at 20 °C without any controlled atmosphere of two different varieties of dessert bananas from the Musa cavendish AAA group and the Musa paradisiaca L. AAB group was studied. Changes in instrumental colour and texture, and in a number of a sensory attributes ("green colour", "yellow colour", "colour uniformity" and "quantity of dark spots" of banana peel and "pulp spots", "over-ripe zones", "hardness", "ripe taste", "sweetness", "astringency" and "central fibrosity") by a descriptive sensory panel, and acceptability by a consumer panel of the two varieties over storage were analysed. During storage, the change in peel colour from green to yellow was gradual in the M. cavendish samples, whereas the M. paradisiaca variety presented a different pattern, remaining green for the first 8 days and then changing rapidly to a yellow tone from day 12 onwards. While the flesh texture of the M. cavendish type bananas softened quite rapidly during storage, it evolved more slowly in the M. paradisiaca variety and there was little variation in the flesh hardness values over the storage time. Maximum sensory acceptability in the M. cavendish samples was found at 8-12 days' storage, for 90% of consumers, but did not rise above 50% in the M. paradisiaca variety. The authors received financial assistance from the Programa de Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo (Project CYTED XI.16) and are also indebted to the Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología of Spain for financial support (Project AGL 2003-09208-C03-02). They also wish to thank Mary Georgina Hardinge for assistance with the English text. 2023-08-10T10:10:10Z 2023-08-10T10:10:10Z 2007-03 2023-08-10T10:10:10Z artículo doi: 10.1016/j.postharvbio.2006.10.007 issn: 0925-5214 e-issn: 1873-2356 Postharvest Biology and Technology 43(3): 319-325 (2007) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/333035 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.postharvbio.2006.10.007 Sí none Elsevier BV
institution IATA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-iata-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IATA España
topic Bananas
Musa cavendish AAA group
Musa paradisiaca AAB group
Ripening
Colour
Texture
Acceptability
Bananas
Musa cavendish AAA group
Musa paradisiaca AAB group
Ripening
Colour
Texture
Acceptability
spellingShingle Bananas
Musa cavendish AAA group
Musa paradisiaca AAB group
Ripening
Colour
Texture
Acceptability
Bananas
Musa cavendish AAA group
Musa paradisiaca AAB group
Ripening
Colour
Texture
Acceptability
Salvador, Ana
Sanz Taberner, Teresa
Fiszman, Susana
Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
description The behaviour during storage at 20 °C without any controlled atmosphere of two different varieties of dessert bananas from the Musa cavendish AAA group and the Musa paradisiaca L. AAB group was studied. Changes in instrumental colour and texture, and in a number of a sensory attributes ("green colour", "yellow colour", "colour uniformity" and "quantity of dark spots" of banana peel and "pulp spots", "over-ripe zones", "hardness", "ripe taste", "sweetness", "astringency" and "central fibrosity") by a descriptive sensory panel, and acceptability by a consumer panel of the two varieties over storage were analysed. During storage, the change in peel colour from green to yellow was gradual in the M. cavendish samples, whereas the M. paradisiaca variety presented a different pattern, remaining green for the first 8 days and then changing rapidly to a yellow tone from day 12 onwards. While the flesh texture of the M. cavendish type bananas softened quite rapidly during storage, it evolved more slowly in the M. paradisiaca variety and there was little variation in the flesh hardness values over the storage time. Maximum sensory acceptability in the M. cavendish samples was found at 8-12 days' storage, for 90% of consumers, but did not rise above 50% in the M. paradisiaca variety.
author2 Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología, CICYT (España)
author_facet Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología, CICYT (España)
Salvador, Ana
Sanz Taberner, Teresa
Fiszman, Susana
format artículo
topic_facet Bananas
Musa cavendish AAA group
Musa paradisiaca AAB group
Ripening
Colour
Texture
Acceptability
author Salvador, Ana
Sanz Taberner, Teresa
Fiszman, Susana
author_sort Salvador, Ana
title Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
title_short Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
title_full Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
title_fullStr Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
title_full_unstemmed Changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
title_sort changes in colour and texture and their relationship with eating quality during storage of two different dessert bananas
publisher Elsevier BV
publishDate 2007-03
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/333035
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AT sanztabernerteresa changesincolourandtextureandtheirrelationshipwitheatingqualityduringstorageoftwodifferentdessertbananas
AT fiszmansusana changesincolourandtextureandtheirrelationshipwitheatingqualityduringstorageoftwodifferentdessertbananas
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