4.7 Article

Stability and sensory shelf life of orange juice pasteurized by continuous ohmic heating

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 53, Issue 10, Pages 4012-4018

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf047857q

Keywords

ohmic heating; orange juice; pasteurization; shelf life

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Electrical heating of food products provides rapid and uniform heating, resulting in less thermal damage to the product. The objective of this research was to examine the effects of ohmic heating on the stability of orange juice with comparison to conventional pasteurization. During storage at 4 degrees C, degradation curves of ascorbic acid followed a linear decrease pattern in both ohmic-heated and conventionally pasteurized orange juices. For five representative flavor compounds (decanal, octana, limonene, pinene, and myrcene), higher concentrations were measured during storage in the ohmicheated orange juice than in conventionally pasteurized juice. Although residual pectin esterase activity remained negligible in both types of juices, particle size was lower in the ohmic-heated orange juice. The sensory shelf life was determined by using the Weibull-Hazard method. Although both thermal treatments prevented the growth of microorganisms for 105 days, the sensory shelf life of ohmictreated orange juice was > 100 days and was almost 2 times longer than that of conventionally pasteurized juice.

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