Introduction. Longkong (Aglaia dookkoo Griff.) fruit is a non-climacteric tropical fruit and grows widely in the SouthEast Asia. It has a unique taste and nutritional properties that make it more valuable to export. However, longkong exhibits a shorter shelf life at ambient (25 • C for 3−5 days) and low temperature (13 • C for 10 days) storage. Therefore, there is an urgent need to extend its shelf life and marketability by using an inexpensive and proficient technique. Materials and methods. Methyl jasmonate (MeJA) treatments with different concentrations (10, 20 and 30 μMol L −1) were used to control physiological and biochemical quality changes of longkong fruit stored at 13 • C and 85% relative humidity. Fruit with no MeJA treatment served as control. The physiological and biochemical quality analyses were carried out at every four days of the interval. Results and discussion. Longkong pericarp chilling injury (CI) index and ion leakage severely increased in the control fruits as compared with MeJA treated fruit. The increased of pericarp phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL), polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD) activities were well controlled by MeJA treatments. Fruit polygalacturonase (PG), pectin methyl esterase (PME) and lipoxygenase (LOX) activities were significantly controlled in MeJA treated fruit. Fruit superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT) and glutathione peroxidase (GPX) activities found higher level in the MeJA treated fruit. Conclusion. The different concentrations of MeJA treatment effectively reduced the severity of physiological and biochemical quality changes in longkong fruit under prolonged low temperature storage.
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of providing information regarding antioxidant content on the liking for a food item consumed in relatively small quantities as a complement to main dishes.Design/methodology/approachHeavy users consuming chilli paste three to four times a week were recruited for consumer tests (n=129). Two sessions of taste tests (with and without antioxidant information) were conducted for hedonic measurement of six ready‐to‐eat Thai chilli pastes. Antioxidant activity of the samples were analysed by DPPH and hydroxyl scavenging methods and reported relative to vitamin C. The four experimental and two commercial samples tested ranged between mild to medium hot levels classified by capsaicin quantity and were served using balanced first‐order carry‐over effect design. Principal component analysis and analysis of variance for split‐plot design of the experiment were employed for data analysis.FindingsThe key finding is that the antioxidant information had no significant effect on consumer liking (p > 0.05). Even though one of the research samples presented high antioxidant efficiency (1.63‐1.80 times higher than commercial samples sold in market places), the sample received only low liking scores and liking was not increased when the antioxidant information was attached. An interaction effect occurred when commercial samples gained high liking scores and increased to even higher when antioxidant information was given with the samples.Research limitations/implicationsThe research was based on a target group of Thai consumers whose ages ranged between 18‐40 years old and who were frequent consumers of the product. Also, the product tested in this research was not a principal meal item but was a condiment. Hence, caution must be exercised in generalising to other target groups or food products.Practical implicationsHealth benefit labelling by producers needs to take into account the usage context of the food. Health information provision may not boost consumer demand in all contexts.Originality/valueThis is one of very few studies exploring the effect of health information provision on liking for a food that is not consumed as a main dish in large quantities, but rather as a condiment consumed in small quantities.
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