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Tomato peeling by ohmic heating: Effects of lye-salt combinations and post-treatments on weight loss,peeling quality and firmness
Affiliation:1. The Ohio State University, Department of Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering, 590 Woody Hayes Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, USA;2. Fishery Technological Development Division, Department of Fisheries, Kaset-klang, Chutuchak, Bangkok 10900, Thailand.;1. Department of Food Engineering, Universidad del Bio-Bio, Casilla 447, Chillán, Chile;2. Group of Emergent Technology and Bioactive Components of Food, Universidad del Bìo-Bío, Casilla 447, Chillán, Chile;3. Department of Chemical Engineering and Environment, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Casilla 110-V, Valparaíso, Chile
Abstract:Ohmic heating without lye has shown promise in tomato peeling; however the use of lye is known to yield high peeled-product quality. This investigation was aimed at determining whether a combination of ohmic heating and low lye concentrations could be synergistic. The results indicated that 0.01/0.5% NaCl/KOH at 2020 V/m was the best condition for tomato peeling in terms of quality, weight loss, and peel cracking time. Further, the treatment showed weight loss that was not significantly different from conventional lye peeling at 7% NaOH and 7% KOH (p < 0.05). NaCl/NaOH mixtures also showed good results, but the quality of products was lower than that using the same concentration, but a higher field strength with NaCl/KOH mixtures. However, no improvement was found using NaCl/CaCl2 and NaCl/NaOH/CaCl2 mixtures which were also found difficult to use due to turbidity and cleaning difficulties. A post-peeling treatment by ohmic heating was investigated to improve firmness of ohmically peeled tomatoes. It was found that the best conditions were 2% CaCl2 solution at a field strength of 403 V/m for 1 and 5 min, and 484 V/m for 5 min.Industrial RelevanceOur earlier work had shown that ohmic heating resulted in peeling of tomatoes that were immersed in salt solutions. The current work details the impact of using small concentrations of lye (either sodium or potassium hydroxide) on peeling loss and quality. Also, we investigate the potential use of calcium chloride, both as peeling solution or as a post-peeling infusion as it impacts firmness of tomatoes. We show that there are ranges of operating conditions which provide yield and quality comparable to conventional lye peeling at far lower lye concentrations, resulting in potentially significant environmental benefit to companies currently using lye peeling.
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