Ultrasonics Sonochemistry (Jan 2021)

Ultrasonic potential in maintaining the quality and reducing the microbial load of minimally processed pomegranate

  • Azam Amiri,
  • Asghar Ramezanian,
  • Seyed Mohammad Hassan Mortazavi,
  • Seyed Mohammad Hashem Hosseini

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70
p. 105302

Abstract

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Difficulty of Pomegranate fruit peeling and arils separation are the main motivations of progressive ready-to-eat pomegranate fresh arils industry. Also, extracted pomegranate arils are highly perishable due to water loss and microbial contamination expose. The aim of the current work was then to evaluate the effect of ultrasound for 15 and 30 min on maintenance of bioactive compounds and microbial load reduction of pomegranate arils cv. Rabbab. Treated arils were kept at 5 °C and analyzed during 15 days of storage. The most and least weight loss of arils obtained in control and 30 min treated samples, respectively. After 12 days of storage, all samples were decayed except those treated for 15 and 30 min. The ultrasound treatment significantly prevented degradation of anthocyanin and ascorbic acid compounds. Total phenol and antioxidant activity decreased during storage. At the end of storage, the most total phenol content (3898.6 mg GAE L−1) was found in arils treated for 30 min whereas the most anthocyanin (91.93 mg L−1), total antioxidant activity (82.65%), and ascorbic acid (2.53 mg L−1) were found in arils treated for 15 min. Ultrasound treated arils had lower microbial load (total mesophilic bacteria in control and 30-min treated samples) in each stage during storage. At the end of storage, the microbial load in treated and control arils was 0.7 and 0.2 Log CFU g−1, respectively). Overall, ultrasound treatment effectively reduced weight loss and preserved bioactive compounds during storage.

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