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Afr. J. Food  Sci


Vol. 2 No. 5


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Enujiugha VN

Akanbi CT

 


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African Journal of Food Science Vol. 2 (5), pp.054-059 May,  2008

ISSN 1996-0794 © 2008 Academic Journals  

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

 

Quality evaluation of canned fermented oil bean seed slices during ambient storage

 

Victor N. Enujiugha1* and Charles T. Akanbi2

 

1Department of Food Science and Technology, Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria.

2Department of Food Science and Technology, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria.

 

*Corresponding author. E-mail: venujiugha@yahoo.com.

 

Accepted  22  March, 2008

 

   Abstract

 

African oil bean (Pentaclethra macrophylla Benth) seed slices were prepared, fermented and canned in three different media using conventional batch retort procedures. The canned products were subjected to sensory evaluation using a 20 man panel of judges, and to six months’ ambient storage with monthly analysis being carried out for total viable counts, peroxide values, free fatty acids and acid values of the sample oils, as well as for hardness and appearance indices of the canned seed slices. The results show that after 6 months storage the total viable counts were 9.3 x 103 cfu/g, 1.7 x 104 cfu/g, and 6.0 x 103 cfu/g for the brine-canned, refined groundnut oil-canned and tomato sauce-canned samples, respectively. Peroxide values and free fatty acids had lowest concentrations in the product canned in refined groundnut oil; whereas the same product was least accepted organoleptically in terms of aroma and overall acceptability. The hardness and appearance indices show increased softening and colour darkening with prolonged storage period, although the samples were still considered acceptable after 6 months tropical ambient storage.

 

Key words: fermented oil bean seeds, canning, quality attributes, storage.

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