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Question on rotting pineapples?
In article ,
Anth wrote: I've noticed that when I've left my pineapples for a while and when I've peeled them to see if they are fit to eat, I've noticed that they tend to go bad from the core outwards. The core becomes dark coloured while the outer fruit has not? If this is true, then has anyone got an explanation for this? This is a strange question for sci.med. sci.bio.botany would be a better choice, so I've added it. The answer, however, is simple. The fruit isn't rotting, it's ripening. Ripening involves the breakdown of pectins and other structural materials and the conversion of starches to sugar. Pineapples also produce bromelain, a protein-digesting enzyme, to discourage herbivores from eating the fruit before the seeds are mature, so you'll note that not only are these discolored fruits much sweeter and more aromatic, they also won't make your mouth burn as much. The fruit ripens from the inside out. If you let it continue to ripen, the outer parts will get darker, softer, sweeter and more aromatic, but the core may also be attacked by yeasts and molds which cause rotting. So where are the seeds? Pineapples are sterile triploids and don't make seeds. The fruits of their normal relatives have a very hard, pea-sized seed in each of the segments, and have probably evolved to have their seeds distibuted by a herbivore large enough to swallow the seeds whole and break down the seed coat in their digestive tracts. Such herbivores are attracted by a fragrant, softened, sweet fruit in which the bromelain feeding deterrent has broken down. People in temperate regions are accustomed to eat tropical fruits in an immature state, because they are picked immature and shipped in that condition. If you talk to people from tropical countries, they'll tell you that they eat fruit ripe, when it's too soft to ship any distance and very rich in flavour. Many fruits don't ripen well off the plant, and people who've had the real thing feel the same way about the tropical fruits we get in the north as anyone who's eaten a real field-grown picked-ripe tomato feels about the rock-hard ones in the supermarket in the winter that are almost indistinguishable in flavour from head lettuce. |
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Question on rotting pineapples?
wrote in message
. .. In article , Anth wrote: I've noticed that when I've left my pineapples for a while and when I've peeled them to see if they are fit to eat, I've noticed that they tend to go bad from the core outwards. The core becomes dark coloured while the outer fruit has not? If this is true, then has anyone got an explanation for this? This is a strange question for sci.med. sci.bio.botany would be a better choice, so I've added it. The answer, however, is simple. The fruit isn't rotting, it's ripening. Ripening involves the breakdown of pectins and other structural materials and the conversion of starches to sugar. Pineapples also produce bromelain, a protein-digesting enzyme, to discourage herbivores from eating the fruit before the seeds are mature, so you'll note that not only are these discolored fruits much sweeter and more aromatic, they also won't make your mouth burn as much. The fruit ripens from the inside out. If you let it continue to ripen, the outer parts will get darker, softer, sweeter and more aromatic, but the core may also be attacked by yeasts and molds which cause rotting. Have you got any info on the mechanism that makes them ripen from the inside out? (I don't always throw the pineapples away when they darken - only sometimes, I do find them a lot sweeter that way) So where are the seeds? Pineapples are sterile triploids and don't make seeds. The fruits of their normal relatives have a very hard, pea-sized seed in each of the segments, and have probably evolved to have their seeds distibuted by a herbivore large enough to swallow the seeds whole and break down the seed coat in their digestive tracts. Such herbivores are attracted by a fragrant, softened, sweet fruit in which the bromelain feeding deterrent has broken down. People in temperate regions are accustomed to eat tropical fruits in an immature state, because they are picked immature and shipped in that condition. If you talk to people from tropical countries, they'll tell you that they eat fruit ripe, when it's too soft to ship any distance and very rich in flavour. Many fruits don't ripen well off the plant, and people who've had the real thing feel the same way about the tropical fruits we get in the north as anyone who's eaten a real field-grown picked-ripe tomato feels about the rock-hard ones in the supermarket in the winter that are almost indistinguishable in flavour from head lettuce. Interesting post - I should test other fruits to see if they ripen from the inside out. Thanks.. Anth |
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