NEW PACKAGING ADVANCES

PROLONGS VEGGIE FRESHNESS

Picture of Eva Almenar under the heading NEW PACKAGING ADVANCES.
Eva Almenar, with MSU’s School of Packaging, has discovered new advances in packaging than can help produce stay fresh longer.

New advances in packaging at Michigan State University can help produce stay fresh longer.

Eva Almenar, with MSU’s School of Packaging, focused on onions, one of the highest-volume vegetables sold worldwide. Her team’s results, featured in a recent issue of International Journal of Food Microbiology, show that improvements can enhance the safety and improve the quality of the ubiquitous vegetable.

“We focused on ready-to-use onions, which have grown to become one of the five most commonly sold vegetables in the last decade,” said Almenar, who also is an MSU AgBioResearch scientist. “We’ve found a package and sanitizer combination that led to diced onions being acceptable for purchase after two weeks of storage.”

Typically, preprepared onions have short shelf lives. Once packaged, they quickly turn color, go soft, lose nutrients and flavor, and become translucent. Microorganisms also thrive as onions decompose, and pathogens, such as salmonella, can cause severe problems.

Controlling the package’s atmosphere and sanitizing vegetables are not new techniques. However, finding the optimum combination of existing methods has never been tested. To that end, the scientists conducted the most-extensive evaluation of techniques that has ever been conducted.

For the full article, please visit msutoday.

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