Author/Authors :
Lisiewska، نويسنده , , Z. and Kmiecik، نويسنده , , W.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Two types of parsley — the Hamburg cv Berlińska and leafy type cv Paramount — were frozen and stored at temperatures of −20 and −30 °C for 9 months. One half of the material was blanched before freezing and the other half was non-blanched. In 100 g fresh leaves of Hamburg parsley there were 20.0 g of dry matter, 310mg of vitamin C, 7.5mg of β-carotene, 203mg of chlorophyll, 30.8 mg NNO3 and 0.078 mg NNO2. For the leafy type the corresponding values were 17.3 g, 257 mg, 9.4mg, 68.5mg, and 0.077mg. The material blanched before freezing showed significant losses in the contents of vitamin C (47–51%), nitrates (22–33%), and nitrites (43–55%) and distinctly smaller ones but also significant in the case of dry matter. During freezing and storage of frozen products there were losses in vitamin C, β-carotene, and chlorophyll while the levels of nitrates and nitrites were variable. Particularly great losses of vitamin C and β-carotene were observed in the non-blanched frozen leaves stored at −20 °C. After 9 monthsʹ storage, frozen products preserved 10–44% of vitamin C, 37–91% of β-carotene, 78–95% of chlorophyll, and 78–153% of nitrates. Of the types of parsley analyzed the Hamburg type was a better raw material for freezing because of a significantly higher content of vitamin C and chlorophyll and significantly less nitrates in frozen products. When the storage temperature was −30 °C, the blanching of leaves was not necessary, although it helped their pressing into cubes.