Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology (Apr 2023)

Influence of Modified Atmospheric Packaging on Shelf-Life and Quality of Naturally Grown Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) Stored Under Different Conditions

  • Rakesh Sharma,
  • Sunakshi Gautam,
  • Subhash Chander Verma,
  • Gaurav Sood,
  • Narender Kumar Bharat,
  • Kuldeep Singh Thakur,
  • Ashu Chandel,
  • Upender Singh Thakur,
  • Rohit Bishist,
  • Subhash Sharma,
  • Pramod Kumar,
  • Rajeshwar Singh Chandel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-4324-2023220466
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 66

Abstract

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Abstract A study was conducted to record the effect of modified atmospheric packaging (MAP), storage conditions (ambient, zero energy cool chamber and refrigerated) as well as storage period on shelf-life and quality of tomatoes produced through Subhash Palekar natural farming (SPNF) and chemical farming (CHEM) systems. Freshly harvested tomatoes (SPNF and CHEM) packed in LDPE pouches (25.40 μm and 10 pin holes/100 cm2 area) and without packaging were stored under ambient (27±2 °C and 70±2% RH), zero energy cool chamber (ZECC) (17±2 °C and 82 ±2 % RH) and low temperature conditions (10±2 ºC and 90 % RH) for shelf-life studies. The shelf-life comparison was done at every two days’ interval up to 24 days based on physiological loss in weight (PLW) and spoilage percentage. SPNF and CHEM tomatoes were compared on the basis of quality attributes (firmness, acidity, TSS, sugars, total phenols, antioxidant activity etc.), mineral content and sensory characteristics. Results revealed that tomato stored in refrigerated condition had significantly (p ˂0.05) lowest PLW and spoilage incidence and highest sensory acceptability up to 24 days and was at par with ZECC stored tomatoes. Quality evaluation indicated that tomatoes grown under SPNF system contained a higher amount of total solids, total sugars, reducing sugars, ascorbic acid, total phenols and ash. The results showed that tomatoes with MAP and stored under refrigerated storage condition retained maximum quality up to 24 days followed by tomatoes stored under ZECC (18 days) compared to 12 days at ambient conditions.

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