Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales

Uni-modal rainfall pattern has long dry spell wherein sweetpotato is scarce, expensive but cheap at harvest. The crop is mostly consumed, processed or sold. Extending shelf-life of roots is crucial for Malawi and Northern Ghana as the crop has high value. Trials were conducted in the countries at th...

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Autores principales: Abidin, P.E., Kazembe, J.A., Atuna, R.A., Amagloh, F.K., Asare, K., Dery, E., Carey, E.E.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: David Publishing Company 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77333
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author Abidin, P.E.
Kazembe, J.A.
Atuna, R.A.
Amagloh, F.K.
Asare, K.
Dery, E.
Carey, E.E.
author_browse Abidin, P.E.
Amagloh, F.K.
Asare, K.
Atuna, R.A.
Carey, E.E.
Dery, E.
Kazembe, J.A.
author_facet Abidin, P.E.
Kazembe, J.A.
Atuna, R.A.
Amagloh, F.K.
Asare, K.
Dery, E.
Carey, E.E.
author_sort Abidin, P.E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Uni-modal rainfall pattern has long dry spell wherein sweetpotato is scarce, expensive but cheap at harvest. The crop is mostly consumed, processed or sold. Extending shelf-life of roots is crucial for Malawi and Northern Ghana as the crop has high value. Trials were conducted in the countries at the community level. In the dry season, temperature is cool in Malawi while warm in Ghana, but thru harmattan, the night is cool with low relative humidity. In Malawi, orange-fleshed sweetpotato Zondeni var., white and yellow types were assessed in three types of storage, Afghan ventilated pit store, storage in dry sand of pit-steps, and of a granary. In Ghana, local moistened heap and sandbox were compared. In Malawi, weight losses were calculated relative to the quantity stored at start, it was not cumulative. At 1.5 months no significant difference was among treatments. By 3.5 months the pit-steps method emerged to be superior and continued to 6.5 months. Losses in granary were due to shriveling, in the pit-stepsdue to termites and rats, and in ventilated pit due to termites, rats and Java black rot. Sprouting was high in pit-steps, but it was simply removed and roots returned to storage. At 6.5 months, the beta-carotene of Zondeni roots was traceable. Farmers gained high price when selling them as roots were scarce. Women favored the pit-steps because it was manageable. In Ghana, the sandbox was superior to local moistened heap. Methods designed were suitable for home consumption, but will require modification for commercialization.
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spelling CGSpace773332024-11-14T08:04:51Z Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales Abidin, P.E. Kazembe, J.A. Atuna, R.A. Amagloh, F.K. Asare, K. Dery, E. Carey, E.E. sweet potatoes ascorbic acid indigenous knowledge carotenoids Uni-modal rainfall pattern has long dry spell wherein sweetpotato is scarce, expensive but cheap at harvest. The crop is mostly consumed, processed or sold. Extending shelf-life of roots is crucial for Malawi and Northern Ghana as the crop has high value. Trials were conducted in the countries at the community level. In the dry season, temperature is cool in Malawi while warm in Ghana, but thru harmattan, the night is cool with low relative humidity. In Malawi, orange-fleshed sweetpotato Zondeni var., white and yellow types were assessed in three types of storage, Afghan ventilated pit store, storage in dry sand of pit-steps, and of a granary. In Ghana, local moistened heap and sandbox were compared. In Malawi, weight losses were calculated relative to the quantity stored at start, it was not cumulative. At 1.5 months no significant difference was among treatments. By 3.5 months the pit-steps method emerged to be superior and continued to 6.5 months. Losses in granary were due to shriveling, in the pit-stepsdue to termites and rats, and in ventilated pit due to termites, rats and Java black rot. Sprouting was high in pit-steps, but it was simply removed and roots returned to storage. At 6.5 months, the beta-carotene of Zondeni roots was traceable. Farmers gained high price when selling them as roots were scarce. Women favored the pit-steps because it was manageable. In Ghana, the sandbox was superior to local moistened heap. Methods designed were suitable for home consumption, but will require modification for commercialization. 2016-04-28 2016-10-18T11:49:32Z 2016-10-18T11:49:32Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77333 en Open Access David Publishing Company Abidin, P.E.; Kazembe, J.; Atuna, R.A.; Amagloh, F.K.; Asare, K.; Dery, E.K.; Carey, E.E. 2016. Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales. Journal of Food Science and Engineering. ISSN 2159-5828. 6:227-236.
spellingShingle sweet potatoes
ascorbic acid
indigenous knowledge
carotenoids
Abidin, P.E.
Kazembe, J.A.
Atuna, R.A.
Amagloh, F.K.
Asare, K.
Dery, E.
Carey, E.E.
Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
title Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
title_full Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
title_fullStr Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
title_full_unstemmed Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
title_short Sand storage, extending the shelf-life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
title_sort sand storage extending the shelf life of fresh sweetpotato roots for home consumption and market sales
topic sweet potatoes
ascorbic acid
indigenous knowledge
carotenoids
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77333
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