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Minimal processing of produce using a combination of UV-C irradiation and ultrasound-assisted washing.

Authors :
Wang, Jiayi
Wu, Zhaoxia
Source :
LWT - Food Science & Technology. Jun2023, Vol. 182, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Microbial contamination is the most significant risk associated with consuming minimally processed fresh food products. The processing time of ultrasound (US)-assisted washing generally exceeds 5 min. To reduce the processing time, yet maintain or improve the efficacy of US-free chlorine (FC, 10 ppm) or -peracetic acid (PAA, 80 ppm) (US-FC/PAA), we simultaneously applied ultraviolet C (UV–C) irradiation. Compared with US-FC/PAA (5 min), US-FC/PAA-UV (3 min; 1.71 kJ/m2) treatment of cherry tomato further reduced food-borne pathogens (E. coli O157:H7, non-O157 E. coli , and Salmonella Typhimurium) by 0.45–0.73 log CFU/g and naturally present microbes (aerobic mesophiles, psychrophiles, molds, and yeasts) by 0.28–0.50 log CFU/g. For fresh-cut lettuce, the efficacy achieved using US-FC/PAA-UV did not exceed that using US-FC/PAA, indicating that US-FC/PAA-UV is more effective in reducing contamination on produce with a smoother surface, e.g., cherry tomato. Sensory qualities (color, odor, crispness, and firmness), antioxidant activity, and phenolic, ascorbic acid, lycopene, and chlorophyll content were not affected by any of the treatments. These results suggest that the simultaneous application of US-FC/PAA and UV-C is an effective alternative to US-FC/PAA washing that reduces processing time and thus improves productivity. • UV-C irradiation reduce the processing time of US-assisted washing for cherry tomato and fresh-cut lettuce. • Combination of US-assisted washing with UV-C did not result in quality degradation in cherry tomato and fresh-cut lettuce. • Produce with a smoother surface was more sensitive to US-assisted washing in combination with UV-C [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00236438
Volume :
182
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
LWT - Food Science & Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164020625
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lwt.2023.114901