A. Pirozzi, Vittoria Del Grosso, G. Ferrari, G. Pataro, F. Donsì
{"title":"Combination of Edible Coatings Containing Oregano Essential Oil Nanoemulsion and Pulsed Light Treatments for Improving the Shelf Life of Tomatoes","authors":"A. Pirozzi, Vittoria Del Grosso, G. Ferrari, G. Pataro, F. Donsì","doi":"10.3303/CET2187011","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Edible coatings (ECs) have attracted increasing attention in the last years as a simple yet effective approach to increase the storability of perishable foods, such as fresh or fresh-cut fruits and vegetables, contributing to maintaining their quality by reducing respiration rate and water loss. The incorporation of antimicrobial agents, such as essential oils, was reported to add also antimicrobial properties to the coatings, through the controlled release of the antimicrobial compounds on the food surface, contributing to further reduce microbial growth over extended periods of storage. Pulsed light (PL) treatments have been widely investigated as non-thermal processes for superficial decontamination of food and food-contact surfaces, because of their ability to cause, through a short exposition, a significant reduction in the microbial population. Therefore, the combination of ECs and PL treatments represents a promising hurdle approach in food preservation, for extending the shelf life of fresh products. ECs in combination with optimum PL treatment condition (4 J/cm2) improved the quality of tomato fruits in terms of reducing the growth of the endogenous flora, as well as of preserving the quality attributes (pH, total soluble solids, and color) over a 15-d storage at room temperature.","PeriodicalId":9695,"journal":{"name":"Chemical engineering transactions","volume":"25 1","pages":"61-66"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Chemical engineering transactions","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3303/CET2187011","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Chemical Engineering","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
Abstract
Edible coatings (ECs) have attracted increasing attention in the last years as a simple yet effective approach to increase the storability of perishable foods, such as fresh or fresh-cut fruits and vegetables, contributing to maintaining their quality by reducing respiration rate and water loss. The incorporation of antimicrobial agents, such as essential oils, was reported to add also antimicrobial properties to the coatings, through the controlled release of the antimicrobial compounds on the food surface, contributing to further reduce microbial growth over extended periods of storage. Pulsed light (PL) treatments have been widely investigated as non-thermal processes for superficial decontamination of food and food-contact surfaces, because of their ability to cause, through a short exposition, a significant reduction in the microbial population. Therefore, the combination of ECs and PL treatments represents a promising hurdle approach in food preservation, for extending the shelf life of fresh products. ECs in combination with optimum PL treatment condition (4 J/cm2) improved the quality of tomato fruits in terms of reducing the growth of the endogenous flora, as well as of preserving the quality attributes (pH, total soluble solids, and color) over a 15-d storage at room temperature.
期刊介绍:
Chemical Engineering Transactions (CET) aims to be a leading international journal for publication of original research and review articles in chemical, process, and environmental engineering. CET begin in 2002 as a vehicle for publication of high-quality papers in chemical engineering, connected with leading international conferences. In 2014, CET opened a new era as an internationally-recognised journal. Articles containing original research results, covering any aspect from molecular phenomena through to industrial case studies and design, with a strong influence of chemical engineering methodologies and ethos are particularly welcome. We encourage state-of-the-art contributions relating to the future of industrial processing, sustainable design, as well as transdisciplinary research that goes beyond the conventional bounds of chemical engineering. Short reviews on hot topics, emerging technologies, and other areas of high interest should highlight unsolved challenges and provide clear directions for future research. The journal publishes periodically with approximately 6 volumes per year. Core topic areas: -Batch processing- Biotechnology- Circular economy and integration- Environmental engineering- Fluid flow and fluid mechanics- Green materials and processing- Heat and mass transfer- Innovation engineering- Life cycle analysis and optimisation- Modelling and simulation- Operations and supply chain management- Particle technology- Process dynamics, flexibility, and control- Process integration and design- Process intensification and optimisation- Process safety- Product development- Reaction engineering- Renewable energy- Separation processes- Smart industry, city, and agriculture- Sustainability- Systems engineering- Thermodynamic- Waste minimisation, processing and management- Water and wastewater engineering