Peanut off-flavours
Published: 21 Mar 2013
What causes off-flavour contamination?
Microorganisms called actinomycetes can grow on stored peanuts. These actinomycetes produce volatile compounds that contaminate the stored nuts, and cause the musty, earthy off-flavours.
Key points
- Off-flavour contamination in North Queensland peanuts can cause major product downgrades, resulting in large financial costs for growers and processors.
- Off-flavour is caused by odorous (volatile) compounds that can diffuse into, and contaminate, clean peanuts, particularly while peanuts are in storage.
- Microorganisms called actinomycetes that grow on peanuts and other organic material in crop windrows can produce these volatile compounds.
- Actinomycetes are present everywhere in the environment but only produce off-flavour compounds under certain conditions such as high temperature or high relative humidity.
- Growth of these microorganisms after digging of the crop can be reduced by making sure peanuts are rapidly dried to safe pod-moisture content after harvest.
- Post-harvest, peanuts should be stored in clean and secure on-farm storage bins to prevent growth of microorganisms, and delivered to the buying point as quickly as possible.
- Rapid and low-cost analytical techniques to detect off-flavour compounds are being developed to help manage this problem.
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GRDC Project Code PCA00002
Region North
- 8.64 mb Peanut off-flavour fact sheet (High resolution version) In 2008, earthy, musty off-flavours were detected in peanuts in North Queensland, which led to over $1 million of product downgrades. The problem has not been recorded, or studied, anywhere else in the world except North Queensland. GRDC-funded research has discovered the major cause of this off-flavour contamination. The GRDC has developed guidelines for a number of pre-harvest and post-harvest practices to minimise the risk.
- 489.94 kb Peanut off-flavour fact sheet (Low resolution version) In 2008, earthy, musty off-flavours were detected in peanuts in North Queensland, which led to over $1 million of product downgrades. The problem has not been recorded, or studied, anywhere else in the world except North Queensland. GRDC-funded research has discovered the major cause of this off-flavour contamination. The GRDC has developed guidelines for a number of pre-harvest and post-harvest practices to minimise the risk.
Region: North
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