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Celery
Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality
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Trevor Suslow and Marita Cantwell
Department of Vegetable Crops, University of California, Davis,
CA 95616
Maturity Indices
Celery is harvested when the overall field reaches the desired marketable
size and before the outer petioles develop "pithiness" (See Pith Breakdown
below). Celery has very uniform crop growth and fields are harvested only
once and stalks are packed by size after trimming outer petioles and leaves.
Quality Indices
High quality celery consists of stalks which are well formed, have thick
petioles, are compact (not significantly bowed or bulging), have minimal
petiole twisting, and have a light green and fresh appearance. Additional
quality indices are stalk and midrib length, freedom from defects such
as blackheart, pithy petioles, seedstalks, cracks or splits, and freedom
from insect damage and decay.
U.S. Grades : Extra No. 1; No. 1; No. 2 ( Grade Standards established
1957)
Celery may be sold as "Unclassified" to designate a lot which has not
been graded within U.S. standards.
Optimum Temperature
0°C (32°F)
At optimum conditions, celery should have good quality after storage
up to 5 to 7 weeks. Commonly, celery is rapidly pre-cooled and then stored
at 0 to 2°C (32 to 36°F) if storage is intended to
be less than one month storing celery at 5°C (41°F)
is not recommended for more than 2 weeks. To maintain good visual and sensory
quality. Some continued growth of inner stalks will occur postharvest at
temperatures >0°C (32°F) .
Optimum Relative Humidity
98-100% R.H.
Rates of Respiration
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Temperature
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0°C (32°F)
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5°C (41°F)
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10°C (50°F)
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15°C (59°F)
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20°C(68°F)
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ml CO2/kg·hr*
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3
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5
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12
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17
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32
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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
< 0.1 µl / kg· hr at 20°C (68°F)
Responses to Ethylene
Celery is not very sensitive to exogenous ethylene at low levels and
low temperatures. Loss of green color can result from exposure to 10ppm
or higher ethylene concentrations at above 5°C (41°F).
Responses to Controlled Atmospheres (CA)
Controlled or modified atmospheres offer moderate benefit to celery.
Delayed senescence and decay development have been observed
at 2-4% O2 and 3-5% CO2.
Injury from low O2 (< 2%) or elevated CO2 (>
10%) will induce off-odors, off-flavors, and internal leaf browning. CA
for mixed storage or long distance transport of celery and lettuce has
some commercial application. Elevated CO2 levels delay leaf
yellowing and decay but could not be used in mixed loads with lettuce (lettuce
does not tolerate CO2 enriched atmosphere).
Physiological and Physical Disorders
Blackheart. Internal leaves develop a brown discoloration which
eventually becomes deep black. The cause is similar to tip-burn of lettuce
or blossom-end rot of tomato. Although many predisposing factors may be
involved, water-stress results in a calcium deficiency disorder causing
cell death.
Brown Checking. Splits, primarily along the inner surface of
the petioles result from boron deficiency.
Freezing Injury. Freezing injury will be initiated at - 0.5°C
(31.1°F). Symptoms of freezing injury include a watersoaked
appearance on thawing and wilted leaves. Mild freezing causes pitting or
short streaks in the petiole which develop a brown discoloration with additional
storage.
Pith Breakdown. The breakdown of the internal tissue of the
petiole, the pith, is often refereed to as "pithiness" or pithy stems.
The aerenchyma tissue of the petiole becomes white, spongy or vacuolated,
and appears dry. Pith breakdown is induced by several factors that result
in the induction of senescence, including cold stress, water stress, pre-bolting
changes (seed stalk induction), and root infections. Pith breakdown will
develop after harvest, but slowly under proper storage conditions.
Crushing or cracking. Common and leads to rapid browning
and decay. Harvesting, packing and handling should be done with great care
to prevent damage to the highly sensitive turgid petioles.
Pathological Disorders
Diseases are an important source of postharvest loss, particularly
in combination with rough handling and poor temperature control. The major
bacterial and fungal pathogens that cause postharvest losses in transit,
storage, and to the consumer are Bacterial Soft-Rot (primarily Erwinia
and Pseudomonas), Gray Mold (Botrytis cinerea), and Watery
Rot (Sclerotinia spp.). Botrytis and Sclerotinia will
develop over a period of a few weeks, even at 2°C (35.6°F).
Special Considerations
Cut petioles of celery, as for fresh-cut, are very prone to bacterial
decay. Less decay and greatly delayed decay symptoms will result from the
use of sharp blades, minimizing abrasions or other damage to cut-ends during
packaging, and good sanitation.
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Produce/ProduceFacts/Veg/celery.html updated July 5, 2000
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