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Title: Melon Quality: What Consumers Like

Author
item Lester, Gene

Submitted to: Australasian Postharvest Conference
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 9/24/2007
Publication Date: 11/14/2007
Citation: Lester, G.E. 2007. Melon quality: What consumers like. Meeting Proceedings. Australasian Postharvest Conference, Terrigal, Australia. #IS2-2.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Sweet melons (Cucumis melo L. plus Citrullus lanatus L.) are the most popular fresh fruit, based on per capita consumption, in the U.S.A. Cucumis melo (muskmelons or rockmelons) are the only fruits in the U.S.A. to have a 2.3 fold increase in consumer demand over the past 35 years. Preference attributes expressed by consumer panelists of whole, fully-mature melon cultivars, following harvest and commercial storage, evaluated for appearance, color, flavor, odor, sweetness, texture, and overall acceptability, are highly discernable for specific sensory attributes. Melon attributes that correlated most strongly with overall fruit acceptability were flavor (r = 0.97**), coupled with fruit sweetness (r = 0.97**), followed closely by fruit texture (r = 0.95**). Flavor was highly correlated with fruit sweetness (r = 0.99**) and fruit sweetness was highly correlated with soluble solids concentration (r = 0.61**). Fruit flavor is the first quality attribute to be altered during whole melon fruit storage, and in the now popular fresh-cut product. Maintaining desirable melon fruit sensory attributes along with microbial safety and human wellness compounds (e.g. Beta-carotene, folic acid, vitamin C, and potassium) in whole as well as fresh-cut fruit throughout distribution and marketing is a challenge. These attributes can be managed through cultivar selection (orange-flesh honey dew better than orange-fleshed netted melon), production location (clay better than sandy soil), enclosed in plastic, and storage temperatures (4 degrees C better than 10 degrees C).