Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas

A laboratory study was carried out at Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe. The main objective of the study was to determine the most effective indigenous method of ripening bananas. The parameters measured were number of days taken by the bananas to reach colour plate number 6, the Total Solu...

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Main Authors: Gama, Tsvakai, Jazi, Alice T., Takawira, Marjory, Chiota, Wendy M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1820
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author Gama, Tsvakai
Jazi, Alice T.
Takawira, Marjory
Chiota, Wendy M.
author_facet Gama, Tsvakai
Jazi, Alice T.
Takawira, Marjory
Chiota, Wendy M.
author_sort Gama, Tsvakai
collection DSpace
description A laboratory study was carried out at Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe. The main objective of the study was to determine the most effective indigenous method of ripening bananas. The parameters measured were number of days taken by the bananas to reach colour plate number 6, the Total Soluble Solids (TSS) after the ripening of bananas and shelf life. The indigenous methods used were acacia leaves, tomatoes, and ashes mixed with water, banana leaves and banana fingers taken from the bunch left to ripe naturally (untreated control). The conventional ripening, of the application of ethrel was used as a positive control. There were significant differences (P = 0.001) on the number of days taken to ripen bananas, and on the shelf life of bananas ripened using the different methods. Banana fingers from the untreated bunch had the highest total soluble solids percentage (11%) followed by bananas treated with ashes mixed in water with (10.167%). There were significance differences (P = 0.001) on banana colour using different indigenous methods. Considering the ripening colour, use of tomatoes and ethrel showed the best colour. It is therefore recommended that the use of ripe tomatoes be adopted by smallholder farmers. Ethrel treated banana fingers and the untreated banana fingers showed highest days for banana shelf life. The results of the study showed that ripened tomatoes can be used in ripening of bananas in as much the same way as ethrel.
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spelling ir-11408-18202022-06-27T13:49:06Z Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas Gama, Tsvakai Jazi, Alice T. Takawira, Marjory Chiota, Wendy M. Banana, ripening, quality, TSS, shelf life, indigenous A laboratory study was carried out at Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe. The main objective of the study was to determine the most effective indigenous method of ripening bananas. The parameters measured were number of days taken by the bananas to reach colour plate number 6, the Total Soluble Solids (TSS) after the ripening of bananas and shelf life. The indigenous methods used were acacia leaves, tomatoes, and ashes mixed with water, banana leaves and banana fingers taken from the bunch left to ripe naturally (untreated control). The conventional ripening, of the application of ethrel was used as a positive control. There were significant differences (P = 0.001) on the number of days taken to ripen bananas, and on the shelf life of bananas ripened using the different methods. Banana fingers from the untreated bunch had the highest total soluble solids percentage (11%) followed by bananas treated with ashes mixed in water with (10.167%). There were significance differences (P = 0.001) on banana colour using different indigenous methods. Considering the ripening colour, use of tomatoes and ethrel showed the best colour. It is therefore recommended that the use of ripe tomatoes be adopted by smallholder farmers. Ethrel treated banana fingers and the untreated banana fingers showed highest days for banana shelf life. The results of the study showed that ripened tomatoes can be used in ripening of bananas in as much the same way as ethrel. 2016-09-19T07:11:51Z 2016-09-19T07:11:51Z 2015 Article http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1820 en Midlands State University Journal of Science, Agriculture and Technology;Special edition; p. 24-33 open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Banana, ripening, quality, TSS, shelf life, indigenous
Gama, Tsvakai
Jazi, Alice T.
Takawira, Marjory
Chiota, Wendy M.
Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
title Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
title_full Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
title_fullStr Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
title_full_unstemmed Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
title_short Influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
title_sort influence of indigenous ripening methods on quality and shelf life of bananas
topic Banana, ripening, quality, TSS, shelf life, indigenous
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1820
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AT chiotawendym influenceofindigenousripeningmethodsonqualityandshelflifeofbananas