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dc.creatorNanos, G. D.en
dc.creatorKiritsakis, A. K.en
dc.creatorSfakiotakis, E. M.en
dc.date.accessioned2015-11-23T10:40:34Z
dc.date.available2015-11-23T10:40:34Z
dc.date.issued2002
dc.identifier10.1016/s0925-5214(01)00164-8
dc.identifier.issn0925-5214
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/31284
dc.description.abstractGreen olives (Olea europaea L. cvs. 'Conservolea' and 'Chondrolia'), destined for Spanish-style processing, were harvested at the beginning and the end of commercial harvest period and stored at 5 and 7.5 degreesC in air or various controlled atmospheres. Olive quality was measured periodically and included mass loss, skin color, flesh firmness and chilling injury symptoms, mainly internal browning. Larger samples of 'Conservolea' olives were commercially processed with the Spanish method after storage for objective quality determination and taste panel evaluation. Mass loss of fresh olives during storage was generally low and no fruit decay was encountered. Fresh 'Chondrolia' green olives were very sensitive to chilling injury. They lost their capacity to develop skin color and ripen after 2-4 weeks of cold storage with excessive internal browning, resulting in pitting and external discoloration. Fresh 'Conservolea' green olives developed skin color, especially at 7.5 degreesC, and after storage in air, 2 or 5 kPa CO2. Fruit stored at 2 kPa O-2 in the presence or not of high CO2 retained their green color for more than 2 months. 'Conservolea' olives slightly softened during storage but with longer storage, in parallel with chilling injury development, a rehardening of the fruit flesh was measured, possibly an additional chilling injury symptom. Storage at 5 degreesC and combinations of 2 kPa O-2 and 2 or 5 kPa CO, increased susceptibility to chilling injury, although fruit successfully retained skin green color. Objective and subjective quality evaluation of processed 'Conservolea' olives gave similar differences between treatments. Abnormal flavor seemed to be an additional result of chilling injury. In conclusion, `Conservolea' green olives can be stored up to 37 days at 5 degreesC in air or for up to 22 days at 7.5 degreesC and 2 kPa O-2 plus 5 kPa CO2. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.en
dc.sourcePostharvest Biology and Technologyen
dc.source.uri<Go to ISI>://WOS:000175738400012
dc.subjectOlea europaeaen
dc.subjectoliveen
dc.subjectqualityen
dc.subjectcold storageen
dc.subjectcontrolled atmosphereen
dc.subjectlowen
dc.subjectO-2en
dc.subjecthigh CO2en
dc.subjectchillingen
dc.subjectATMOSPHERESen
dc.subjectQUALITYen
dc.subjectFRUITSen
dc.subjectAgronomyen
dc.subjectFood Science & Technologyen
dc.subjectHorticultureen
dc.titlePreprocessing storage conditions for green 'Conservolea' and 'Chondrolia' table olivesen
dc.typejournalArticleen


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