Abstract
Heating `Golden Delicious' apples (Malus domestica Borkh.) for 4 days at 38C or pressure-infiltrating them with a 4% CaCl 2 solution reduced decay and maintained fruit firmness during 6 months of storage at 0C. Heating reduced decay caused by Penicillium expansum Link ex Thorn by ≈30%, while pressure infiltration with CaCl 2 reduced decay by >60%. Pressure infiltration with CaCl 2 after heating reduced decay by ≈40%. Pressure infiltration maintained firmness best (>84 N), as measured with a manually driven electronic fruit-firmness probe, followed by heat and CaCl 2 (76 N), heat alone (71 N), and no treatment (control) (60 N). Force vs. deformation (FD) curves from a puncture test with a fruit-firmness probe mounted in a universal testing machine showed that fruit heated before storage were firmer than all nonheated fruit, except those pressure-infiltrated with 4% CaCl 2 . However, FD curves also showed that apples pressure-infiltrated with 4% CaCl 2 differed quantitatively from apples in all other treatments, including those heated.
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CITATION STYLE
Sams, C. E., Conway, W. S., Abbott, J. A., Lewis, R. J., & Ben-Shalom, N. (2019). Firmness and Decay of Apples following Postharvest Pressure Infiltration of Calcium and Heat Treatment. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 118(5), 623–627. https://doi.org/10.21273/jashs.118.5.623
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