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Carrot
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
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Trevor V. Suslow, Jeffrey Mitchell and Marita Cantwell
Department of Vegetable Crops, University of California, Davis,CA
95616
Maturity Indices
- In practice, harvest decisions for carrots are based on several criteria
depending on the market outlet or sales endpoint.
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Typically carrots are harvested at an immature state when the roots have
achieved sufficient size to fill in the tip and develop a uniform taper.
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Length may be used as a maturity index for harvest timing of ‘cut and peel'
carrots to achieve a desired processing efficiency.
Quality Indices
There are many visual and organoleptic properties that differentiate
the diverse varieties of carrots for fresh market and minimal processing.
In general, Carrots should be:
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Firm (not flacid or limp)
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Straight with a uniform taper from ‘shoulder' to ‘tip'
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Bright orange
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There should be little residual "hairiness" from lateral roots
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No "green shoulders" or "green core" from exposure to sunlight during the
growth phase.
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Low bitterness from terpenoid compounds
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High moisture content and high reducing sugars are most desireable for
fresh consumption.
U.S. Grades:
Bunched Carrots - No. 1 and Commercial Grade
Topped Carrots - Extra No.1, U.S. No. 1, No. 1 Jumbo, No. 2
Quality Defects include lack of firmness, non-uniform shape,
roughness, poor color, splitting or cracking, green core, sunburn, and
poor quality of tops or trimming.
Optimum Temperature
0°C(32°F)
Storage life at 0°C is typically:
Bunched: 10-14 days Immature roots: 4-6
weeks
Fresh-cut: 3-4 weeks Mature roots: 7-9
months
(Lightly processed)
Common storage conditions rarely achieve the optimum temperature for
long- term storage to prevent decay, sprouting, and wilting. At storage
temperatures of 3-5 °C, mature carrots can be stored with minimal
decay for 3-5 months.
Common ‘Cello-pack' carrots are typically immature and may be stored
successfully for 2-3 weeks at 3-5°C. Bunched carrots are highly
perishable due to the presence of the shoots (tops). Good quality is generally
maintained only for 8-12 days, even with contact ice.
Lighlty processed (fresh-cut, cut and peel) carrots typically maintain
quality of 2-3 weeks at 3-5°C.
Optimum Relative Humidity
98-100 % ; High relative humidity is essential to prevent dessication
and loss of crispness. Free moisture from the washing process or unevaporated
condensation, common with plastic bin-liners ( and due to fluctuating temperatures
) will promote decay.
Rates of Respiration
Temperature
°C (°F) |
mg CO2 / kg·hr
Topped Bunched |
| 0 32 |
10-20 18-35 |
| 5 41 |
13-26 25-51 |
| 10 50 |
20-42 32-62 |
| 15 59 |
26-54 55-106 |
| 20 68 |
46-95 87-121 |
| 25 77 |
NA NA |
To calculate heat production multiply mg CO2/kg·hr by 220 to
get Btu/ton/day or by 61.2 to get kcal/metric ton/day. NA= not applicable
Rates of Ethylene Production
>0.1µl / kg·hr at 20°C (68°F)
Responses to Ethylene
Exposure to ethylene will induce the development of bitter flavor due
to isocoumarin formation. Exposure to as little as 0.5ppm exogenous ethylene
will result in perceptible bitter flavor, within 2 weeks, at normal storage
conditions. Thus, carrots should not be mixed with ethylene-producing commodities.
Responses to Controlled Atmospheres(CA)
Controlled atmosphere is of limited use for carrots and does not extend
postharvest life of carrots beyond that in air. CO2 concentrations
above 5% have been shown to increase spoilage. Low oxygen concentrations,
below 3 %, are not well tolerated and generally results in increased bacterial
rot.
Physiological & Physical
Disorders
Intact Roots
Bruising, shatter-cracks and tip-breakage are signs of
rough handling. Nantes-type carrots are particularly susceptible. Sprouting
will continue as carrot roots develop new shoots after harvest. This
is one reason low temperature postharvest management is critical. Common
associated disorders include wilting, shriveling, or rubberiness due to
dessication. White Root is a physiologic disorder due to suboptimal
production conditions which results in patchy or streaks of low color on
the carrot roots.
Intact or Fresh-cut
Bitterness may be caused by preharvest stress (improper irrigation
scheduling) or exposure to ethylene from ripening rooms or mixing with
commodities such as apples. Freezing injury will likely result at
temperatures of -1.2°C ( 29.5°F) or lower. Frozen
carrots generally exhibit an outer ring of water-soaked tissue, viewed
in cross section, which blackens in 2-3 days.
Fresh-cut
White Blush, due to dehydration of cut or abrasion-peeled surfaces,
has been a problem on fresh-cut carrots. Sharp cutting blades and residual
free-moisture on the surface of the processed carrots will significantly
delay the development of the disorder.
Pathological Disorders
The most prominent postharvest disease concerns are Gray Mold (Botrytis
rot ) Watery Rot ( Sclerotinia rot ), Rhizopus rot, Bacterial
Soft Rot, induced by Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora and Sour Rot ( Geotrichum rot ). Proper handling and low temperature
storage and transportation conditions are the best methods to minimize
losses.
Special Considerations
Rapid hydrocooling soon after harvest is strongly recommended.
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Produce/ProduceFacts/Veg/carrot.html updated July 5, 2000
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