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Osmosonication of Blackberry Juice: Impact on Selected Pathogens, Spoilage Microorganisms, and Main Quality Parameters
Author(s) -
Wong Eric,
Vaillant Fabrice,
Pérez Ana
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of food science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1750-3841
pISSN - 0022-1147
DOI - 10.1111/j.1750-3841.2010.01730.x
Subject(s) - food spoilage , microorganism , food science , quality (philosophy) , biology , bacteria , physics , genetics , quantum mechanics
  Osmosonication combines ultrasound with nonthermal concentration. It was applied on tropical highland blackberry ( Rubus adenotrichus ) juice over different periods of time to assess reductions in microorganism and the impact on main quality parameters. This juice had been inoculated with  Salmonella  spp.,  Shigella  sp., a lactic acid bacterium, yeasts, and molds. It was then sonicated for 5.9 to 34.1 min at 20 kHz and 0.83 W/mL. Nonthermal concentration was simulated by mixing the juice with a concentrate to obtain 650 g TSS/kg. It was then stored at −18 °C for up to 82 h. The lactic acid bacterium, yeasts, and molds were reduced by 1.60 to as much as 5.01 log 10 CFU/mL, whereas, for pathogens, reductions were total ≥7.1 log 10 CFU/mL after 24 h of storage, even for juice not sonicated, because of low pH. Color, antioxidant capacity, anthocyanins, and ellagitannins did not change significantly during sonication treatment up to 32 min. However, an off‐flavor was detected after 8 min of sonication. Nonetheless, osmosonication can be considered as an alternative to thermal processes for producing safe and high‐quality concentrates. Practical Application : Osmosonication represents a potential processing alternative for producing safe and high‐quality concentrated fruit juice without applying thermal treatments. Findings reported in this article can also be applied by industries when concentrating juices by classical means at relatively low temperature. It provides industries with a mathematical model specific for blackberry juice, from which different combinations of sonication time and storage time of concentrate can be chosen to achieve safety and quality goals.

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