| Scald (Fruit)© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced
Scald on fruit is brown patches that appear on the skin of the fruit, mostly on the side of the fruit that was away from the sun.
In some instances, the skin is entirely dead, and the flesh underneath the patch will have gone brown as well. It makes the fruit unsellable.
Growers still (as of 2006) don't have an exact idea of what causes it to occur or not occur.
It hits pears and apples, but mostly apples. Apples that are particularly susceptible to scald include Cortland, Granny Smith, McIntosh, Red Delicious, Rome Beauty, Stayman and Turley.
Scald occurs during or after storage.
Also called: Échaudure (French)
See Also: Apples, PearsOther entries for: Technical Terms
Accolade, Acetic Acid, Air-Layered, Alliumophobia, Alpha Amylase, Alum, Alveograph, Ascorbic Acid, Best Before Dates, Biologique, Butyric Acid, Carbonic Acid, Carnauba Wax, Chocolate Bloom, Collops, Cracker Barrel, Cucina Casalinga, Cultivar, Deipnophobia, Dioecious Plants, Du Jour, Dunking, Etiolation, EU Designations, F1, Firkin, Free-Range Chickens, Free-Range Total Freedom, French Revolutionary Calendar, Gastrique, Gāte-sauce, Gomme Arabique, Hybrid, Invaiatura, Kosher, Lachanophobia, Lime (Chemical), Listeria, Lye, Mageirocophobia, Maillard Reaction, Open Pollinated, Ostraconophobia, Oxalic Acid, Pack Date, Pavé, Phosphoric Acid, Plant Variety Protection, Pome, Potassium Nitrite, Potluck Suppers, Punnet, Quinine, Rifilature, Scald (Fruit), Sell-By Dates, Sodium Nitrite, Stufatura, Sunday Roast, Traditional Free-Range, Turophile, Use-By Dates, Yatai, Ye Shi, Yearling, Yuuki
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