13533634482?profile=RESIZE_400xThere is an increasing market of mildly processed chilled Not-From-Concentrate (NFC) orange juices, preserved by methods such as high pressure processing (HPP) and pulsed electric fields (PEF).

To protect consumers from food fraud, analytical methods to differentiate such juices from thermally pasteurized juices are required.

This paper (open access) sought to identify volatile chemical markers specific to the preservation process.  To screen for appropriate candidate markers, the authors applied a complementary non-targeted volatilomics and sensomics approach.  This identified 58 candidate markers, among which 20 were quantitated and nine were statistically confirmed.

Extension of the quantitations to stored and doubly-treated juices finally resulted in the identification of (S)-carvone and vanillin as promising candidate markers. In combination, the two compounds could distinguish the HPP-treated juice from thermally treated juices and could even identify an HPP-treated juice that had received an additional thermal pasteurization.

Photo by ABHISHEK HAJARE on Unsplash

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