The effects of cultivation conditions, winter storage, peeling method, browning prevention chemicals replacing sodium bisulfite, and packing methods on the sensory, nutritional and microbiological quality of pre-peeled potato were examined. Two different cultivation lots of the potato variety Van Gogh were used. Cultivation and harvesting conditions and peeling method were the most important facts reducing the sensory quality, especially the appearance, of prepeeled and sliced potatoes. Cooking and baking of potatoes decreased the appearance defects detected in raw potatoes. The levels of vitamin C in packaged samples decreased during winter storage. Cooking for 10 min and keeping potatoes at 60 degrees C for 1 h after cooking also decreased the content of vitamin C. In potato samples immediately after treatments aerobic bacteria were present at levels of 400 to 2,950 CFU/g and lactic acid bacteria at levels of 8 to 16 CFU/g. The number of aerobic bacteria did not increase during storage, and the number of lactic acid bacteria increased at the most to 90 CFU/g. Peeling, washing and packaging methods, cultivation conditions, and winter storage did not have important effects on the number of microbes present.
The efficacy of various commercially available enzymes in the determination of thiamine and riboflavin in foods was studied by liquid chromatography (LC) using external standards. Different enzymes, as well as the same enzyme produced by different manufacturers, very strongly affected the determination of both vitamins. The recoveries for different foods ranged from 85 to over 100% for thiamine and from 80 to 100% for riboflavin. The present LC method was accurate and precise when tested on a food and a feed reference material, and coefficients of variation were 5.5% for thiamine and 10% for riboflavin in a rye flour reference material tested for 8 months.
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