Use of Alternative Sanitizers on Minimally Processed Watercress Harvested in Two Different Seasons
Author
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Escalona Contreras, Víctor
Author
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Hinojosa, Andrea
Author
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Char, Cielo Dolores
Author
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Villena, Paulina
Author
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Bustamante, Andrés
Author
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Sáenz Hernández, Carmen Luisa
Admission date
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2016-03-18T01:26:36Z
Available date
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2016-03-18T01:26:36Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Food Processing and Preservation 39 (2015) 1287–1298
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1111/jfpp.12347
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/137174
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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There is an increasing concern about the formation of halogenated compounds when sodium hypochlorite (SH) is used as food sanitizer. This research evaluated the quality of watercress harvested in two seasons treated with alternative sanitizers combined with modified atmosphere packaging. Chlorine dioxide (5-10 mg/L), acidified sodium chlorite (250-500 mg/L), peroxyacetic acid (5090 mg/L) and SH (100 mg/L) were used. Initial respiration rate decreased from 80-135 to 40-72 mg CO2 kg/h in spring-and summer-harvested watercress. Chlorine dioxide and SH caused a reduction in aerobic mesophilic bacteria of 1.8 and 1.3 log colony-forming unit (cfu/g), respectively. Enterobacteriaceae reductions of 1.1 log cfu/g were achieved using SH and peroxyacetic acid in spring and 1.4 log cfu/g by applying acidified sodium chlorite in summer. None of the sanitizers could handle high initial microbial loads for more than 8 days, showing that a raw material with low initial microbial count is required to guarantee the product safety.