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Influence of storage temperature and time on the physicochemical and bioactive properties of roselle-fruit juice blends in plastic bottle

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dc.creator Mgaya-Kilima, B.
dc.creator Remberg, S. F.
dc.creator Chove, B. E.
dc.creator Wicklund, T.
dc.date 2017-06-30T14:53:59Z
dc.date 2017-06-30T14:53:59Z
dc.date 2014
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:53:38Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:53:38Z
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/1762
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/93969
dc.description Food Science & Nutrition 2014; 2(2): 181– 191
dc.description Roselle-fruit juice blends were made from roselle extract and mango, papaya, and guava juices at the ratio of 80:20, 60:40, 40:60, and 20:80, % roselle: fruit juice, respectively. The blends were pasteurized at 82.5°C for 20 min and stored in 100 mL plastic bottles at 28 and 4°C for 6 months. The effects of storage time and temperature on physicochemical and bioactive properties were evaluated. Total soluble solids, pH, and reducing sugars increased significantly (P < 0.05) in some blends while titratable acidity decrease with increasing storage time. Vitamin C, total monomeric anthocyanins (TMA), total phenols (TPC), and antioxidant activity (ferric reducing ability of plasma, FRAP) in all roselle-fruit blends (40% roselle) decreased significantly (P < 0.05) at 28 and 4°C as storage progressed. Vitamin C in all roselle-fruit blends (40% roselle) decreased from 58–55% to 43–42% when stored at 28 and 4°C, respectively. TMA losses were 86–65% at 28°C and 75–53% at 4°C while TPC losses were 66–58% at 28°C and 51–22% at 4°C. Loss of antioxidant capacity (FRAP) was 18–46% at 28°C and 17–35% at 4°C. A principal component analysis (PCA) differentiated roselle- juice fruit blends into two clusters with two principle components PC1 and PC2, which explained 97 and 3% (blends stored at ambient temperature) and 96 and 4% (blends stored at refrigerated temperature) of the variation, respectively. PC1 differentiated roselle-guava juice blends which were characterized by vitamin C, TPC, FRAP, and pH, while PC2 from another cluster of roselle-mango and roselle-papaya juice blends and was characterized by TSS, RS, and color parameters (L* a* b*). However, TMA was the main variable with the highest effect on all roselle-fruit juice blends regardless of the storage time and temperature.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Food Science & Nutrition
dc.subject Anthocyanins
dc.subject Antioxidants
dc.subject Fruit juice
dc.subject Roselle
dc.title Influence of storage temperature and time on the physicochemical and bioactive properties of roselle-fruit juice blends in plastic bottle
dc.type Article


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