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18 Vegetables and Fruits part 1

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Title: 18 Vegetables and Fruits part 1


1
18 Vegetables and Fruits(part 1)
2
  • Vegetables and fruits have many similarities with
    respect to their compositions, methods of
    cultivation and harvesting, storage properties,
    and processing. In fact many vegetables may be
    considered fruits in the true botanical sense.
    Botanically, fruits are those portions of a plant
    that house seeds. Therefore tomatoes, cucumbers,
    eggplant, peppers, okra, sweet corn, and other
    vegetables would be classified as fruits
    according to this definition.
  • However, the important distinction between fruits
    and vegetables has come to be made on a usage
    basis those plant items that are generally eaten
    with the main course of a meal are considered to
    be vegetables those that commonly are eaten as
    dessert are considered fruits. This is the
    distinction made by food processors, certain
    marketing laws, and the consuming public, and
    this distinction will be followed in this
    discussion.

3
GENERAL PROPERTIES
  • Because vegetables are derived from various parts
    of plants, it is sometimes helpful to classify
    vegetables according to

the plant part from which they are derived. See
Table 18.1.
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  • Fruits are the mature ovaries of plants with
    their seeds. The edible portion of most fruits is
    the fleshy part of the pericarp or vessel
    surrounding the seeds. Fruits in general are
    acidic and sugary. They commonly are grouped into
    several major divisions, depending principally on
    botanical structure, chemical composition, and
    climatic requirements.
  • Thus, berries are generally small and quite
    fragile, although cranberries are rather tough.
    Grapes are also berries, which grow in clusters.
    Melons, on the other hand, are large and have a
    tough outer rind.
  • Drupes contain single pits and include such items
    as apricots, cherries, peaches, and plums.
  • Pomes contain many pits and are represented by
    apples, quince, and pears.
  • Citrus fruits, characteristically high in citric
    acid, include oranges, grapefruit, and lemons.
  • Tropical and subtropical fruits include bananas,
    dates, figs, pineapples, papayas, mangos, and
    others but not the separate group of citrus
    fruits these all require warm climates for
    growth.

5
GROSS COMPOSITON
  • The compositions of representative vegetables and
    fruits in comparison with a few of the cereal
    grains are shown in Table 18.2. The composition
    of vegetables and fruits depends not only on
    botanical variety, cultivation practices, and
    weather, but also on the degree of maturity prior
    to harvest and the condition of ripeness, which
    continues after harvest and is influenced by
    storage conditions. Nevertheless, some
    generalizations can be made.
  • Most fresh vegetables and fruits are high in
    water, low in protein, and low in fat. The water
    content is generally greater than 70 and
    frequently greater than 85. Commonly, protein
    content is no greater than 3.5 and fat content
    no greater than 0.5.

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  • Exceptions exist to these typical values dates
    and raisins are substantially lower in moisture
    but cannot be considered fresh in the above
    sense legumes such as peas and certain beans are
    higher in protein a few vegetables such as sweet
    corn are slightly higher in fat and avocados are
    substantially higher in fat.
  • On the other hand, vegetables and fruits are
    important sources of both digestible and
    indigestible carbohydrates. The digestible
    carbohydrates are present largely as sugars and
    starches, and the indigestible cellulosic and
    pectic materials provide fiber, which is
    important to normal digestion.
  • Fruits and vegetables also are important sources
    of minerals and certain vitamins, especially
    vitamins A and C. The precursors of vitamin A,
    including b-carotene and certain other
    carotenoids, are present particularly in the
    yellow-orange fruits and vegetables and in the
    green, leafy vegetables. Citrus fruits are
    excellent sources of vitamin C, but green, leafy
    vegetables and tomatoes are also good sources.
    Potatoes also are an important source of vitamin
    C in many countries, not so much because of the
    level of vitamin C in potatoes, which is not
    especially high, but rather because of the large
    quantities of potatoes consumed.

8
STRUCTURAL FEATURES
  • The structural unit of the edible portion of most
    fruits and vegetables is the parenchyma cell
    (Fig. 18.1). Although parenchyma cells of
    different fruits and vegetables differ somewhat
    in gross size and appearance, all have
    essentially the same fundamental structure.
    Parenchyma cells of plants differ from animal
    cells in that the actively metabolizing
    protoplast portion of plant cells represents only
    a small fraction (about 5) of the total cell
    volume. This protoplast is rather filmlike and is
    pressed against the cell wall by the large
    water-filled central vacuole. The protoplast has
    inner and outer semipermeable membrane layers
    between which are confined the cytoplasm and its
    nucleus. The cytoplasm contains various
    inclusions, among them starch granules and
    plastids such as the chloroplasts and other
    pigment-containing chromoplasts. The cell wall,
    cellulosic in nature, contributes rigidity to the
    parenchyma cell and confines the outer
    protoplasmic membrane. It also is the structure
    against which other parenchyma cells are cemented
    to form extensive three-dimensional tissue
    masses.

9
Fig. 18.1 Diagram of a parenchyma cell.
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  • The layer between cell walls of adjacent
    parenchyma cells, referred to as the middle
    lamella, is composed largely of pectic and
    polysaccharide cement-like materials. Air spaces
    also exist, especially at the angles formed where
    several cells come together.
  • The relationships between these structures and
    their chemical compositions are further indicated
    in Table 18.3. Parenchyma cells vary in size from
    plant to plant but are quite large when compared
    to bacterial or yeast cells. The larger
    parenchyma cells may have volumes many thousand
    times greater than a typical bacterial cell.

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  • Several types of cell other than parenchyma cells
    contribute to the familiar structures of fruits
    and vegetables. These include various types of
    tubelike conducting cells, which distribute water
    and salts throughout the plant. Such cells
    produce fibrous structures toughened by the
    presence of cellulose and the woodlike substance
    lignin. Cellulose, lignin, and pectic substances
    also occur in specialized supporting cells, which
    increase in importance as plants become older.
  • An important structural feature of all plants,
    including fruits and vegetables, is protective
    tissue. This can take many forms but usually is
    made up of specialized parenchyma cells that are
    pressed compactly together to form a skin, peel,
    or rind. Surface cells of these protective
    structures on leaves, stems, or fruits secrete
    waxy cutin and form a water impermeable cuticle.
    These surface tissues, especially on leaves and
    young stems, also contain numerous valvelike
    cellular structures (stomata) through which
    moisture and gases can pass.

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13
Turgor and Texture
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  • The range of textures encountered in fresh and
    cooked vegetables and fruits is indeed great, and
    to a large extent can be explained in terms of
    changes in specific cellular components. Since
    plant tissues generally contain more than
    two-thirds water, the relationships between these
    components and water further determine textural
    differences.
  • Cell Turgor. Quite apart from other contributing
    factors, the state of turgor, which depends on
    osmotic forces, plays a paramount role in
    determining the texture of fruits and vegetables.
    The cell walls of plant tissues have varying
    degrees of elasticity and are largely permeable
    to water and ions as well as to small molecules.
    The membranes of the living protoplast are
    semipermeable, that is they allow passage of
    water but selectively transfer dissolved and
    suspended materials. The cell vacuoles contain
    most of the water of plant cells within this
    water are dissolved sugars, acids, salts, amino
    acids, some water-soluble pigments and vitamins,
    and other low molecular weight constituents.

14
  • Other Factors Affecting Texture. Whether a high
    degree of turgor exists in live fruits and
    vegetables or a relative state of flabbiness
    develops from loss of osmotic pressure, final
    texture is further influenced by several cell
    constituents.
  • Cellulose, Hemicellulose, and Lignin. Cell walls
    in young plants are very thin and are composed
    largely of cellulose. As the plant ages, cell
    walls tend to thicken and become higher in
    hemicellulose and in lignin. These materials are
    fibrous and tough and are not significantly
    softened by cooking.

15
  • Pectic Substances. The complex polymers of sugar
    acid derivatives include pectin and closely
    related substances. The cement-like substance
    found especially in the middle lamella, which
    helps hold plant cells to one another, is a
    water-insoluble pectic substance. Upon mild
    hydrolysis, this substance yields water-soluble
    pectin, which can form gels or viscous colloidal
    suspensions with sugar and acid. Certain
    water-soluble pectic substances also react with
    metal ions, particularly calcium, to form
    water-insoluble salts such as calcium pectates.
    The various pectic substances may influence
    texture of vegetables and fruits in several ways.
    When vegetables or fruits are cooked some of the
    water-insoluble pectic substance is hydrolyzed
    into water-soluble pectin. This results in a
    degree of cell separation in the tissues and
    contributes to tenderness. Since many fruits and
    vegetables are somewhat acidic and contain
    sugars, the soluble pectin also tends to form
    colloidal suspensions which thicken the juice or
    pulp of these products.

16
  • Fruits and vegetables also contain a natural
    enzyme that can further hydrolyze pectin to the
    extent that it loses much of its gel-forming
    property. This enzyme is known as pectin methyl
    esterase. Some products (e.g., tomato juice and
    tomato paste) contain both pectin and pectin
    methyl esterase. If freshly prepared tomato juice
    or paste is allowed to stand, the original
    viscosity gradually decreases due to the action
    of pectin methyl esterase on pectin gel. This can
    be prevented if the tomato products are quickly
    heated to a temperature of about 82? to
    inactivate enzyme liberated from broken cells
    before the pectin is hydrolyzed. This treatment,
    known as the hot-break process, is commonly
    practiced in the manufacture of tomato paste and
    tomato juice products to yield products of high
    viscosity. In contrast, when low-viscosity
    products are desired, no heat is used and enzyme
    activity is allowed to proceed. This is the
    cold-break process. After the appropriate
    viscosity is achieved, the product can be heat
    treated, as in canning, to preserve it for
    long-term storage.

17
  • In the living plant, water taken up by the roots
    passes through the cell walls and membranes into
    the cytoplasm of the protoplasts and into the
    vacuoles to establish a state of osmotic
    equilibrium within the cells. The osmotic
    pressure within the cell vacuoles and within the
    protoplasts pushes the protoplasts against the
    cell walls and causes them to stretch slightly in
    accordance with their elastic properties. These
    processes result in the characteristic appearance
    of live plants and are responsible for the
    desired plumpness, succulence, and much of the
    crispness of harvested live fruits and
    vegetables.
  • When plant tissues are damaged or killed by
    storage, freezing, cooking, or other causes,
    denaturation of the proteins of the cell
    membranes occurs, resulting in the loss of
    perm-selectivity. Without perm-selectivity,
    osmotic pressure in cell vacuoles and protoplasts
    cannot be maintained, and water and dissolved
    substances are free to diffuse out of the cells
    and leave the remaining tissue in a soft and
    wilted condition.

18
  • It often is desirable to firm the texture of
    fruits or vegetables, especially when products
    are normally softened by processing. In this
    case, advantage is taken of the reaction between
    soluble pectic substances and calcium ions to
    form calcium pectates. These calcium pectates are
    water insoluble when they are produced within
    the tissues of fruits and vegetables, they
    increase structural rigidity. Thus, it is common
    commercial practice to add low levels of calcium
    salts to tomatoes, apples, and other vegetables
    and fruits prior to canning or freezing.
  • Starch. The occurrence of starch within starch
    granules and the swelling and gelatinization of
    these granules in the presence of moisture and
    heat have previously been mentioned. When starch
    granules absorb water and gelatinize, they
    gradually lose their granular structure and
    produce a pasty, viscous colloidal suspension.
    The swelling of starch granules within the cells
    of plant tissues upon heating causes a
    corresponding swelling of these cells and
    contributes to firm texture and plumpness.

19
  • On the other hand, starch swelling together with
    osmotic pressure can be so great as to cause
    plant cells to burst. When this happens, the
    viscous colloidal starch suspension oozes from
    the cells and imparts pastiness to the system.
    The same occurs when cells containing much starch
    are ruptured by processing conditions. This is
    particularly important in the case of potato
    products. The desirable texture of mashed
    potatoes and other potato products is a mealiness
    rather than a stickiness or pastiness. Therefore,
    in the production of dehydrated potato granules
    and flakes much of the technology of mixing and
    drying is aimed at minimizing both cell rupture
    and release of free starch. The same is true in
    the cooking and mashing of fresh potatoes, which
    if excessive can produce undesirable pastiness.

20
Color and Color Changes
  • Much of the appeal of fruits and vegetables in
    our diets is due to their delightful and variable
    colors. The pigments and color precursors found
    in fruits and vegetables occur for the most part
    in the cellular plastid inclusions (e.g.,
    chloroplasts and other chromoplasts) and to a
    lesser extent dissolved in fat droplets or water
    within the cell protoplast and vaculole. These
    pigments are classified into four major groups
    chlorophylls, carotenoids, anthocyanins, and
    anthoxanthins. Pigments belonging to the latter
    two groups also are referred to as flavonoids,
    and include the tannins.
  • Chlorophylls. Chlorophylls are largely contained
    within the chloroplasts and have a primary role
    in the photosynthetic production of carbohydrates
    from carbon dioxide and water. The bright green
    color of leaves and other plant parts is due
    largely to oil-soluble chlorophylls, which in
    nature are bound to protein molecules in highly
    organized complexes.

21
  • When plant cells are killed by ageing,
    processing, or cooking, the protein of these
    complexes is denatured and the chlorophyll may be
    released. Such chlorophyll is highly unstable and
    rapidly changes in color to olive green or brown.
    This color change is believed to be due to the
    conversion of chlorophyll to pheophytin.
  • Conversion to pheophytin is favored by acid pH
    and does not occur readily under alkaline
    conditions. For this reason peas, beans, spinach,
    and other green vegetables, which tend to lose
    their bright green colors on heating, can be
    largely protected against such color changes by
    the addition of sodium bicarbonate or other
    alkali to the cooking or canning water. However,
    this practice is not looked upon favorably nor
    used commercially because alkaline pH tends to
    soften cellulose and vegetable texture, and to
    increase the destruction of vitamin C and thiamin
    at cooking temperatures.

22
  • Carotenoids. Pigments belonging to the carotenoid
    group are fat soluble and range in color from
    yellow through orange to red. They often occur
    along with the chlorophylls in the chloroplasts,
    but also are present in other chromoplasts and
    may occur free in fat droplets. Important
    carotenoids include the orange carotenes of
    carrot, corn, apricot, peach, citrus fruits, and
    squash the red lycopene of tomato, watermelon,
    and apricot the yellow-orange xanthophyll of
    corn, peach, paprika, and squash and the
    yellow-orange crocetin of the spice saffron.
    These and other carotenoids seldom occur singly
    within plant cells.
  • Of major importance is the relationship of some
    carotenoids to vitamin A. A molecule of orange
    -carotene is converted into two molecules of
    colorless vitamin A in the animal body. Some
    other carotenoids (e.g., a-carotene, -carotene,
    and cryptoxanthin) also are precursors of vitamin
    A, but because of minor differences in chemical
    structure one molecule of each of these yields
    only one molecule of vitamin A.
  • In food processing the carotenoids are fairly
    resistant to heat, changes in pH, and water
    leaching since they are fat soluble. However,
    they are very sensitive to oxidation, which
    results in both color loss and destruction of
    vitamin A activity.

23
  • Flavonoids. Pigments and color precursors
    belonging to the flavonoids are water soluble and
    commonly are present in the juices of fruits and
    vegetables. The flavonoids include the purple,
    blue, and red anthocyanins of grapes, berries,
    plums, eggplant, and cherry the yellow
    anthoxanthins of light colored fruits and
    vegetables such as apple, onion, potato, and
    cauliflower and the colorless catechins and
    leucoan-thocyanins which are food tannins and are
    found in apples, grapes, tea, and other plant
    tissues. These colorless tannin compounds are
    easily converted to brown pigments upon reaction
    with metal ions.
  • The color of anthocyanins depends upon the pH.
    Thus, many of the anthocyanins that are violet or
    blue in alkaline media become red upon addition
    of acid. Cooking of beets with vinegar tends to
    shift the color from a purplish red to a brighter
    red, while in alkaline water the color of red
    fruits and vegetables shifts toward violet and
    gray-blue. Red anthocyanins also tend to become
    violet and blue upon reaction with metal ions,
    which is one reason for lacquering the inside of
    metal cans when the true color of
    anthocyanin-containing fruits and vegetables is
    to be preserved.

24
  • The water solubility of anthocyanins also results
    in easy leaching of these pigments from cut
    fruits and vegetables during processing and
    cooking.
  • Yellow anthoxanthins also are pH sensitive
    tending toward a deeper yellow in alkaline media.
    Thus potatoes or applies become somewhat yellow
    when cooked in water with a pH of 8 or higher,
    which is common in many areas. Acidification of
    the water to pH 6 or lower favors a whiter color.
  • The colorless tannin compounds upon reaction with
    metal ions form a range of dark-colored complexes
    which may be red, brown, green, gray, or black.
    The various shades of these colored complexes
    depend upon the particular tannin, the specific
    metal ion, pH, concentration of the complex, and
    other factors not yet fully understood.
  • Water-soluble tannins appear in the juices
    squeezed from grapes, apples, and other fruits as
    well as in the brews extracted from tea and
    coffee.

25
  • The color and clarity of tea are influenced by
    the hardness and pH of the brewing water.
    Alkaline waters that contain calcium and
    magnesium favor the formation of dark brown
    tannin complexes, which precipitate when the tea
    is cooled. If acid in the form of lemon juice is
    added to such tea, its color lightens and the
    precipitate tends to dissolve. Iron from
    equipment or from pitted cans has caused a number
    of unexpected colors to develop in
    tannin-containing products, such as coffee,
    cocoa, and foods flavored with these.
  • The tannins also are important because they
    possess astringency which influences flavor and
    contributes body to coffee, tea, wine, apple
    cider, beer, and other beverages. Excessive
    astringency causes a puckery sensation in the
    mouth, which is the condition produced when tea
    becomes high in tannins from overbrewing.
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