A new and legitimate method of ripening mangoes has been introduced.
Food Safety Officers stepped in to guide vendors for ensuring the quality of mangoes.
The
vendors were trained to use ethylene to ripen mangoes. Ethylene,
secreted from mango trees, was used in liquid form to apply on mangoes,
District Designated Officer, Food Safety and Standards Act (FSSA), M.
Jagadis Chandrabose told
The Hindu
here on Friday.
The ethylene liquid should be sprayed
on mangoes and it would make mangoes ripen in a day or two thus making
them fit for consumption as per FSSA norms.
Ethylene produces natural gas initially but ripens mangoes, kept in a favourable atmosphere.
Ten
ml of ethylene liquid needs to be dissolved in ten litres of water for
spraying it on considerable number of mangoes. With this, sweetness,
nutritional value and palatability of the fruit would remain intact, he
said.
Explaining adverse effects of artificially
ripened mangoes done with the help of calcium carbide, a harmful
chemical compound, he said the latter would emit acetylene gas causing
health disorder like ulcer, insomnia, loss of appetite.
Such
practices were adopted by vendors to skip warehousing expenditure and
make a fast buck. Consumption of such mangoes might lead to cancer, he
said.
With such a substance, mangoes could ripe within eight hours.
These
mangoes would be colourful and attractive but its pulp would not be
sweet, Dr. Chandrabose said. He added that surprise raids would be
conducted in stalls to check any illegal method of ripening mangoes.
Source:http://www.thehindu.com
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