4.7 Article

Effects of vacuum packaging storage of minimally processed cassava roots at various temperatures on microflora, tissue structure, starch extraction by wet milling and granule quality

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
Volume 101, Issue 15, Pages 6347-6354

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jsfa.11305

Keywords

cassava; cell walls; starch extraction; storage temperature; vacuum packaging

Funding

  1. International Centre for Development Oriented Research in Agriculture [GU 14587956]
  2. University of Pretoria Institutional Research Theme bursary

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The effects of vacuum packaged storage temperature on cassava root quality were studied. Frozen storage had minimal adverse effects, refrigerated storage had negligible microbial growth but some disruption of cell structure, and ambient temperature storage led to considerable Lactobacilli fermentation.
BACKGROUND Vacuum package storage is commonly applied to reduce postharvest deterioration in minimally processed cassava roots. However, the influence of vacuum packaging conditions on root end-use quality is poorly understood. Hence, the effects of vacuum packaged storage at ambient, refrigerated and freezing temperatures on microflora, cassava tissue structure and starch extraction by wet milling were studied. RESULTS Vacuum packaged storage temperature strongly affected cassava root quality. Minimal adverse effects were obtained with frozen storage. With refrigerated storage, there was negligible microbial growth but some disruption of the parenchyma cell wall structure suggestive of chilling injury. With ambient temperature storage, there was considerable Lactobacilli dominated fermentation. This caused substantial cell degradation, probably due to the production of extracellular cellulolytic and other cell wall degrading enzymes. A benefit of this cell wall breakdown was that it substantially improved starch extraction with wet milling from the stored cassava pieces; by 18% with pieces that had been ambient vacuum packaged and wet milled using a 2000 mu m opening screen. However, ambient temperature storage resulted in some starch granule pitting due to the action of extracellular amylases from the fermenting microorganisms. CONCLUSION The best vacuum packaging storage conditions for minimally processed cassava depends on application and cost. For short-term storage, refrigeration would be best for vegetable-type products. For several months storage, freezing is best. For wet milling applications, this could be combined with subsequent short-term ambient temperature storage as it improves starch extraction efficiency and could reduce distribution energy costs. (c) 2021 Society of Chemical Industry.

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