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Broccoli
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
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Marita Cantwell and Trevor Suslow
Department of Vegetable Crops, University of California, Davis,
CA 95616
Maturity Indices
Head diameter and compactness; all florets (beads) should be closed
Quality Indices
Good quality broccoli should have dark or bright green closed florets,
and the head should be compact (firm to hand pressure), with a cleanly
cut stalk of the required length.
Optimum Temperature and Relative Humidity
Low temperature is extremely important to achieve adequate shelf-life
in broccoli. A temperature of 0°C (32°F) with >95% RH is required
to optimize broccoli storage life (21-28 days). Heads stored at 5°C
(41°F) can have a storage life of 14 days; storage life at 10°C
(50°F) is about 5 days. Broccoli is usually rapidly cooled by liquid-icing
the field-packed waxed cartons. Hydrocooling and forced-air cooling also
can be used, but temperature management during distribution is more critical
than with iced broccoli.
Freezing Injury
This may occur if salt is used in the liquid-ice cooling slurry or
if noniced broccoli is stored below -1°C (30°F). Frozen and thawed
areas on the florets appear very dark and translucent, may turn brown after
thawing and are very susceptible to bacterial decay.
Rates of Respiration
Broccoli heads have relatively high respiration rates:
| Temperature |
0°C (32°F) |
5°C (41°F) |
10°C (50°F) |
15°C (59°F) |
20°C (68°F) |
| ml CO2/kg·hr |
10-11 |
16-18 |
38-43 |
80-90 |
140-160 |
The respiration rates of florets are slightly more than twice the rates
of the intact heads.
To calculate heat of 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
Very low, <0.1 µL/kg·h at 20°C (68°F).
Responses to Ethylene
Broccoli is extremely sensitive to exposure to ethylene. Floret yellowing
is the most common symptom. Exposure to 2 ppm ethylene at 10°C (50°F)
reduces shelf-life by 50%.
Responses to Controlled Atmospheres (CA)
Broccoli can be benefitted by 1-2% O2 with 5-10% CO2
atmospheres at a temperature range of 0-5°C (32-41°F). Although
under controlled conditions such low O2 levels extend shelf-life,
temperature fluctuations during commercial handling make this risky as
broccoli can easily produce offensive sulfur-containing volatiles. As a
result, a high rate of air exchange is recommended in standard marine container
shipments of broccoli. Most modified atmosphere packaging for broccoli
is designed to maintain both O2 and CO2 at about
10% to avoid the development of these undesirable off-odor volatiles.
Physiological Disorders
Hollow stem is an open area in the stem at the cut surface which may
become discolored; growing conditions and variety selection affect development
of this disorder.
Floret (bead) yellowing. The florets are the most perishable
part of the broccoli head; yellowing may be due to overmaturity at harvest,
high storage temperatures, and/or exposure to ethylene. Any development
of yellow beads ends commercial marketability. Bead yellowing due to senescence
should not be confused with the yellow-light green color of areas of florets
not exposed to light during growth, sometimes called "marginal yellowing".
Brown floret (bead). Is a disorder in which areas of florets do
not develop correctly, die and lead to brown discolored areas. This is
thought to be caused by plant nutritional imbalances.
Physical Injury
Rough handling at harvest can damage the florets and increase decay.
Pathological Disorders
Bacterial decay. Various soft-rot causing organisms (Erwinia,
Pseudomonas) may affect broccoli shelf-life. Rots due to these organisms
are usually associated with physical injury.
Fungal pathogens. Although not as common as bacterial rots,
gray mold rot (Botrytis cinerea) and black mold (Alternaria spp.) can infect
broccoli heads; this may occur under rainy, very cool growing conditions.
Special Considerations
Storage life varies considerably among broccoli cultivars. Shelf-life
(appearance of any yellow beads = end of shelf-life) may vary from 12 to
>25 days depending on cultivar: Shelf-life of different broccoli cultivars
stored at 5°C (41°F), and 95% RH:
Short (<20 Days): Baccus, Brigadier, Cruiser, Mariner,
Symphony, Zeus
Moderate (20 to 25 days): Cascade, Embassy, Emperor, Esquire,
Galaxy, Gem, Green Lady, Green Valiant, Hi Caliber, Midori #8, Pinnacle,
Sakata #12, Schooner, Southern Comet, Vantage
Long (>25 days): Citation, Galaxy, Glacier, Greenbelt,
Marathon, Mercedes, Packman, Pirate, Premium Crop, Shogun, Skiff
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Produce/ProduceFacts/Veg/broccoli.html updated July 5, 2000
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