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Recent Developments in Edible Coatings for Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Cover

Recent Developments in Edible Coatings for Fresh Fruits and Vegetables

Open Access
|Dec 2021

Figures & Tables

Edible coating matrix and its significant effects

Food productType of fruitCoating materialAdditiveActive componentMethod of application of edible coatingEffective concentrationSignificant effectsReferences
Applesfresh applescassava starch + gellan + soy lecithinglycerolthyme essential oilspreading using glove (approximately 1.5 mL per fruit)8 : 2 (starch : gellan)prevented water loss in persimmon, showed antifungal propertiesSapper et al. 2019
fresh-cut applescassava starch, carnauba wax and stearic acidglycerolcinnamon bark or fennel (0.05% to 0.30% v/v, respectively)dipping (2 minutes)0.3% v/v cinnamon bark essential oil into cassava starch (2% and 3% w/v)good barrier properties along with good mechanical and structural properties, exhibited antioxidant and antimicrobial propertiesChiumarelli & Hubinger 2014
fresh-cut applesxanthan gumpropylene glycoltocopherol nanocapsulesdipping-physicochemical properties preserved, activity of PAL and PPO enzymes reduced and reduction in respiration rate observedGalindo-Pérez et al. 2015
fresh-cut appleshsian-tsao leaf gum (dHG) + tapioca starchglycerolcinnamon essential oil, ascorbic acid (antibrowning agent), calcium chloride (texture enhancer)dipping (1 minutes)1.7% starch, 0.3% dHG, 0.3% glycerol, 0.2% cinnamon essential oil, 1% CaCl2 and 1% ascorbic acidmaintained the quality of food product, shelf life extended, and delayed browningPan et al. 2013
fresh-cut applessoy protein isolateglycerol, sodium sorbateferulic aciddipping (10 seconds)SPI (30 g·L−1) + ferulic acid (4 g·L−1)controlled enzymatic browning and extended shelf life of fresh-cut applesAlves et al. 2017
Plumsfresh plumswheat starch + whey protein isolate (WPI)glycerol-dipping80−20% (wheat starch and WPI)shelf-life extension, reduced respiration rateBasiak et al. 2019
fresh plumshydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC) + beeswax (BW)glycerol, stearic acid, food additives, such as SEP (sodium ethylparaben). SMS (sodium methylparaben) and PS (potassium sorbate)-spreading (approximately 300 μL per fruit)36% beeswax (dry basis), 3 : 1 (HPMC : glycerol) and 5 : 1 (BW: stearic acid)delayed postharvest ripening, reduced weight, firmness, and color loss and extended shelf life of plumsGunaydin et al. 2017
fresh plumsrice starch and carrageenanglycerol-spreading (approximately 0.5 mL per fruit)-delayed respiration rate, restricted ethylene production and firmness retainedThakur et al. 2018
Strawberriesfresh strawberriessodium alginate and pectin eugenol and citral essential oilsdipping (2 minutes)alginate 2% + eugenol EO 0.1% and alginate 2% + citral EO 0.15% + eugenol EO 0.10%pectin 2% + eugenol EO 0.1% and pectin 2% + citral EO 0.15%reduction in microbial load during storageGuerreiro et al. 2015
fresh strawberriesbeeswax-coconut and sunflower oilspreading60 mL coconut oil, 50 mL sunflower oil and 25 g beeswaxgood moisture barrier, hence prevented water loss and deactivation of vitamin C, improved appearance, antifungal due to presence of coconut oilMladenoska 2012
fresh strawberrieschitosan + banana starch2% citric acid solution and sorbitolaloe-vera geldipping (3 minutes)final concentration of coating solution; 3% (w/v) starch, 2% (w/v) chitosan and 20% (v/v) aloe-vera gelreduced decay rate, showed antifungal and antimicrobial properties, decreased in water vapor loss and delayed loss of physicochemical properties during storagePinzon et al. 2020
fresh strawberrieschitosanacetic acid-dipping (5 minutes)application of 1% and 1.5% chitosan showed significant positive resultsincreased in shelf life, inhibited oxidative enzyme activity. i.e., delayed in G-POD and PPO activities and retarded decrease of ascorbic acid. GSH content, and β-1,3-gluconase activityWang & Gao 2013
Citrus bruitfresh mandarinschitosan, MC, HPMC, CMCglycerol-spreadingfirst layer CMC (1.5%) and second layer chitosan (1.5%)firmness and gloss improved and physiological quality of fruits improvedArnon et al. 2015
fresh fruitchitosan and locust bean gum (LBG)-pomegranate peel extract chitosan (1 % w/v) and LBG (0.5% w/v) + 0.361 g dry water pomegranate peel extract (WPPE per mL)shelf life extended, inhibited green mold development, antifungal in natureKharchoufi et al. 2018
fresh fruitbeeswaxbenlate-fungicide--5% beeswax + 0.5% benlateextension of shelf life and overall quality improvedShahid & Abbasi 2011
Cherry tomatoes and tomatoesfresh cherry tomatoesquinoa protein chitosan-thymol nanoemulsiondipping (3 minutes)1 : 5 w/v quinoa flour and distill water + 10% thymol nanoemulsionantifungal in nature inhibited the growth of Botrytis cinereaRobledo et al. 2018
cold stored cherry tomatoeshydroxypropyl methyl cellulose (HPMC) and beeswax (BW) (HPMC-lipid edible composite emulsion)glycerol 2% sodium benzoate and oleic acid-dipping (30 seconds)-inhibited the growth of A. alternate, reduction in the black spots, respiration rate and weight loss, controlled the postharvest quality of food, decreased water loss, and food looked glossyFagundes et al. 2015
fresh tomatoespectin + corn flour + beetroot powderglycerol dipping delayed respiration rate, retained biochemical quality, decreased in weight loss and decaying rateSucheta et al. 2019
Peachesflesh peacheschitosanchlorogenic acid--1 : 1 (chitosan : chlorogenic acid) showed highest antioxidant activityexhibited strong antioxidant activities and results promised to maintain firmness, ascorbic acid content, SSC and TA when stored at 20 °C for 8 daysJiao et al. 2019
flesh-cut peaches--green tea, Posidonia oceanica (PO)dipping-controlled microbial spoilage and made food product look attractive for consumersPiva et al. 2017
fresh fruitsodium alginate-rhubarb extractdipping1 % (w/v) sodium alginate + 0.05% rhubarb extractcontrol degradation caused by Penicillium expansum, exhibited antifungal properties and maintained physiological quality parametersLi et al. 2019
Button mushroomsfreshtragacanth gum Satureja khuzistanica essential oil 100–1000 ppm of Satureja khuzistanica essential oilmaintenance of 92.4% tissue firmness, and reduction in microorganism counts, such as yeasts and molds and Pseudomonas, compared to uncoated samplesNasiri et al. 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/johr-2021-0022 | Journal eISSN: 2353-3978 | Journal ISSN: 2300-5009
Language: English
Page range: 127 - 140
Submitted on: Dec 1, 2020
Accepted on: Nov 1, 2021
Published on: Dec 31, 2021
Published by: National Institute of Horticultural Research
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 times per year

© 2021 Neegam Nain, Gunjan K. Katoch, Sawinder Kaur, Prasad Rasane, published by National Institute of Horticultural Research
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.