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Spinach
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
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Trevor V. Suslow and Marita Cantwell
Department of Vegetable Crops, University of California, Davis, CA
95616
Maturity Indices
Spinach is selected for size and maximal recovery of clean leaves that
are mid-maturity to young. Older and yellowing leaves are avoided when
making the harvest cut. Generally 3-4 weeks of re-growth are required before
a second harvest will yield adequate volume.
Quality Indices
Spinach, whether bunched or as leaves, should be uniformly green (generally
not yellow-green), fully turgid, fairly clean, and free from serious damage.
For bunched spinach, roots should be trimmed short to grade standards and
petioles should be predominantly shorter than the leaf blade.
U.S. Grades:
Bunched — U.S. No. 1, No. 2 (Oct. 1987)
Leaves — U.S. Extra No. 1, No. 1, Commercial (Dec. 1946)
Optimum Temperature
0°C (32°F); 95-98% R.H.
Spinach is highly perishable and will not maintain good quality for
more than 2 weeks. Wilting, yellowing of leaves, and decay are likely to
increase following storage beyond 10-14 days; faster at common distribution
conditions of 5 to10°C(41 to 50°F).
In a 1994 UC Davis study, an average of 17, 28, and 45% of leaves of
16 varieties had decay after 2, 3, and 4 weeks at 5°C, respectively.
After the same periods at 5°C, 18, 25, and 45% of the leaves
showed some yellowing. Commercial varities such as Imperial Spring, Shasta,
Polka, Spectrum and Sporter had notably longer shelf- life than did varieties
Bossanova, Spark and Space.
Rates of Respiration
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Temperature
°C
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Temperature
°F
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ml CO2 / kg·hr
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0
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32
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9-11
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5
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41
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17-29
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10
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50
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41-69
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15
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59
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67-111
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20
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68
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86-143
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§ To calculate heat production, multiply ml CO2 / kg·hr
by 440 to get BTU/ton/day or by 122 to get kcal/metric ton /day.
Rates of Ethylene Production
< 0.1µl / kg·hr at 20°C (68°F)
Responses to Ethylene
Spinach is highly sensitive to exogenous ethylene. Accelerated yellowing
will result from low levels of ethylene during distribution and short-term
storage. Do not mix loads such as apples, melons and tomatoes with spinach.
Responses to Controlled Atmosphere (CA)
Atmospheres of 7-10% O2 and 5-10% CO2 offer moderate
benefit to spinach by delaying yellowing. Spinach is tolerant to
higher CO2 concentration but no increase in benefits has
been observed. Package film for prewashed spinach leaves is selected to
maintain 1-3% O2 and 8-10% CO2 .
Physiological Disorders
Freezing Injury. Freezing injury will be initiated at - 0.3°C
(31.5°F). Freezing injury results in watersoaking
typically followed by rapid decay by soft-rot bacteria.
Yellowing. Spinach is highly sensitive to exogenous ethylene
(See Response to Ethylene).
Physical Injury
Harvesting and handling should be done with care to prevent damage to
the petioles and leaves. Bunching ties should not be too tight
as crushed or spilt petioles may lead to rapid decay.
Pathological Disorders
Bacterial Soft-Rot (primarily Erwinia and Pseudomonas)
is a common problem. Decay is usually associated with damaged
leaves and stems.
Special Considerations
Package-icing and top-icing loads may be used. Frequent light misting
may be done in displays to delay wilting of bunched spinach.
Return to Produce Facts
University of California
One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616-8683
Copyright ©1996-2000. All rights reserved
Produce/ProduceFacts/Veg/spinach.html updated July 12, 2000
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