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Chemical and physical changes in the pulp during ripening and post‐harvest storage of cocoa pods
Author(s) -
Biehl Böle,
Meyer Bernd,
Crone Gundel,
Pollmann Lutz,
Said Mamot Bin
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
journal of the science of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 142
eISSN - 1097-0010
pISSN - 0022-5142
DOI - 10.1002/jsfa.2740480207
Subject(s) - pulp (tooth) , ripening , chemistry , fermentation , beet pulp , ripeness , sucrose , point of delivery , dry matter , respiration , food science , horticulture , botany , biology , medicine , pathology
Changes in the pulp during ripening and post‐harvest storage of cocoa pods were determined during numerous harvests in Malaysia (1984 to 1987) and Ghana (1985 to 1986), in order to gain a basis for understanding the influence of ripening and storage on acid formation during subsequent fermentation. Changes in the pulp during ripening of fully grown pods were the same but less pronounced than those during dry storage of harvested pods: the percentage of water in the pulp was not changed significantly, but the amount of water and of dry matter per seed was strongly reduced (by 40–50%) due to water evaporation and respiration of sugars. Sucrose was inverted completely. The result of these changes was an equally strong reduction of the pulp volume per seed and increase of the pulp surface to pulp volume ratio. The reduction of acid formation during fermentation with beans from stored pods is ascribed predominantly to these changes rather than to the reduction in the amount of sugars, and is explained not only by the facilitated mass aeration but, above all, by the significant increase in respiration at the pulp surface over ethanol fermentation in the pulp when the pulp volume is reduced prior to fermentation. Ghanaian pods at similar stages of ripeness revealed more advanced stages of the pulp compared with Malaysian pods and consequently less significant change during storage. Water evaporation and respiration during pod storage were significantly higher in the pulp than in the husk.