## Abstract Postharvest processing and storage not only influence the content and composition of flavonoids and phenolic acids in foodstuffs, thereby altering the amount of potentially bioavailable bioactive compounds, but can also modify their chemical form. Moreover, due to the intensive metaboli
Influence of postharvest processing and storage on the content of phenolic acids and flavonoids in foods
β Scribed by Ryszard Amarowicz; Reinhold Carle; Gerhard Dongowski; Alessandra Durazzo; Rudolf Galensa; Dietmar Kammerer; Guiseppe Maiani; Mariusz K. Piskula
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 711 KB
- Volume
- 53
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1613-4125
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The review is based on the evaluation of electronically collated data published between 2002 to June 2006. It is based on 325 references dealing with the following subclasses of phenolic compounds: hydroxycinnamic and hydroxybenzoic acids, chalcones, flavanones, flavones, flavonols, monomeric flavanols and anthocyanins. Only publications dealing directly with the effects of storage and postharvest processing on the phenolic acid and flavonoid contents of foods were considered. The expectation that the structural diversity even within each subgroup, and the number of different procedures and of different parameters would make finding homogenous tendencies unlikely, has, in most instances, been confirmed. By adding a database Excel table combined with a focused and unified evaluation, specific additional information was rendered accessible and concise. It holds true for most of the subclasses in question that the effect of storage and food processing on the polyphenol content is negligible in comparison to the differences between different varieties of plants. Variety dependence must always be considered, for all classes of compounds.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES