On-farm evaluation of the impact of drying and storage on the carotenoid content of orange-fleshed sweet potato (Ipomea batata Lam.) [Approved article]
Material type: ArticleLanguage: English Description: 46:52-60Subject(s):- Carotenoids
- Drying
- Ipomoea batatas
- On-farm research
- Storage
- Africa
- Mozambique
- Carotenoides
- Secamiento
- Ipomoea batatas
- Investigación en la finca
- Almacenamiento
- Africa
- Mozambique
- Thompson
- RJ
- Pre-Print
- Electronic documents
- Documentos electrónicos
- Tecnología de los Alimentos
- Agricultura
- Food technology
- Agriculture
- Articles in Refereed Journals
- 69787
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Online Document | CIAT Library Web | Electronic Document | 69787 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan (Restricted Access) | |||||
Journal Article | CIAT Library Document collection CINFOS | Document Collection CINFOS | 69787 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Short Loan | 100086871 |
Drying of orange-fleshed sweet potato was evaluated under African rural conditions. Three locally built dryers (open-air sun, tunnel and shade) were tested using Resisto and MGCL01 varieties in Mozambique. Total carotenoid losses were low in all dryers being 9.2% on average. After drying, sweet potato chips were stored in a traditional way (jute bags inside a mud house). Chip size (thin, thick chip or slice) had a significant effect on drying (P < 0.05) but not on storage and variety had an effect on both. Total carotenoid losses during storage were much higher being 83.7% on average, after 4 months, with main individual carotenoids fitting a first-order kinetics degradation. Globally, carotenoid losses on-farm or on-research station were of similar level. eng