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Evaluation of minimal processing of orange juice by automated data analysis of volatiles and nonvolatile polar compounds determined by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry
Authors:Manuela Cerdán‐Calero  Luís Izquierdo  John M. Halket  Enrique Sentandreu
Affiliation:1. Instituto de Agroquímica y Tecnología de Alimentos (IATA‐CSIC), , 46980 Paterna, Valencia, Spain;2. Mass Spectrometry Facility/Drug Control Centre, King's College London, , London, SE1 9NH UK;3. Specialist Bioanalytical Services Ltd, , Egham, Surrey, TW20 9LZ UK
Abstract:The effects of minimal processing on the metabolite composition of orange juice were studied. Volatiles and nonvolatile polar compounds in Lane Late orange juices, with different pulp contents, treated by high‐pressure homogenisation (HPH) at 150 MPa (at 58, 63 and 68 °C) and stored for 3 months at 3 °C were analysed by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC‐MS) with automated data processing. A total of 92 volatiles and 22 polar components (trimethylsilyl, TMS, derivatives of sugars, organic acids and amino acids) were determined in fresh, processed and stored juices. Initially, concentration of fresh flavours (hydrocarbon terpenes and aldehydes) determined in the homogenised samples with the original pulp content was higher than that determined in fresh juice. During storage, desirable descriptors were better preserved in the juice processed at 68 °C with the lowest increase in off‐flavours (alcohols and ketones). Generally, operations assayed did not exert a significant influence on polar metabolites, showing no effect on their decrease with time.
Keywords:   AMDIS     automated data processing  GC‐MS analysis  high‐pressure homogenisation  metabolite profiling  minimally processed orange juice  pulp reduction
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