Abstract
Banana (Musa acuminata Coll. Cavendish cv. Williams)
eating quality was assessed through winter, spring and summer, and for mildly
chilled bananas with symptoms mimicking that of ‘winter-chilled’
fruit using sensory testing and principal component analysis of
mass-spectrometric data obtained from a ‘chemical nose’. Sensory
testing of bananas harvested at different times of the year showed no
differences in flavour preference, even though soluble solids were higher in
spring at 23.6%, compared with winter at 22.6% and summer at
21.9%. Principal component analysis of mass-spectrometric data did not
reveal aroma differences between times of the year. Results of difference
tests for mildly chilled and non-chilled bananas indicated no differences in
aroma intensity or sweetness. Mild chilling did not alter soluble solids and
principal component analysis of mass-spectrometric data did not discriminate
between chilled and non-chilled bananas.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
8 articles.
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