Leaves of erva-mate (Ilex paraguariensis St. Hill) were heat treated with different combinations of time and temperature. Polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD) residual activities and colouring (L, a, b and DE) were studied after treatment for 3 weeks. The best results for enzyme inactivation after heat treatment were obtained with the leaves treated at 450°C for 15 s and at 500°C for 10 s, with reductions of 90.6% and 83.4% for PPO and 94.5% and 92.7% for POD. These groups also showed low levels of enzyme activity during the first few days of storage, and a few days later no enzyme activity was detected. The data on the colours, specially -a values (green colour), were in accordance with results for enzyme activity and helped in the research on the changes that occur in the leaves during storage. Data from this work can be suggested for the improvement of the current method of erva-mate processing, which is still performed empirically.
The green coloring is the first characteristic in mate tea (chimarrão). Mate producers perform the sapeco process by rapidly passing the leaves through flames. It has been proven that this procedure leads to high energy consumption and also to excessive exposure of the raw material to heat. In this present work, the effect of sapeco on the inactivation of peroxidase, the color, and degradation of the chlorophyll in mate was evaluated by performing the sapeco procedure in a conveyor oven, without any direct contact with the flames. The mate processed in a conveyor oven was compared with mate processed in mate factories. Inactivation of peroxidase showed that sapeco performed in a conveyor oven at 255 ºC for 20 s can replace the traditional process of the industrial sapeco. This time/temperature binomial is significantly important for the green coloring and the minimization of chlorophyll degradation, besides representing a significant reduction in the temperature traditionally applied in the industrial sapeco of mate.
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