Friday, April 18, 2008

Strawberry Book

Integrated Pest Management for Strawberries
Publication 3351 - 142 pages - $30.00 (Currently out of stock)
List of contents How to order

This is the most complete guide now available for strawberry production and pest management. This manual is intended primarily for growers and pest control professionals, but home gardeners also will find the book useful because a special chapter addresses home garden strawberry production.

Latest Information More than 60 University of California researchers and Cooperative Extension specialists contributed to the information in this manual. Integrated Pest Management for Strawberries contains the latest information on managing pests and growing strawberries.

Critical Topics

The manual covers such critical topics as:

plant structure and development
characteristics of strawberry cultivars
production of certified planting stock
handling bare-root transplants
using polyethylene mulch
soil fumigation
fertilization
soil and tissue sampling
irrigation scheduling
salinity management
scheduling monitoring activities
resistance to commonly used pesticides
important pest problems in different areas
pest problems and cultural practices in home garden strawberries
Extraordinary Photographs and IllustrationsHundreds of extraordinary photographs and illustrations show common and uncommon pest problems. The manual contains more than 300 excellent color photographs to help you identify, monitor, and manage more than 140 different pest problems, including insects, mites, diseases, nematodes, disorders, nutrient deficiencies, weeds, and vertebrate pests. The bloom stages of each fruit--apricots, cherries, nectarines, peaches, plums, and prunes--are illustrated with color photographs. Exceptional line drawings and tables complement the photographs and cover such topics as:
susceptibility of major rootstocks and varieties to a range of pests
pollination
fertilizer recommendations
the importance of dormant and delayed dormant treatments
supplies and forms for pest monitoring
tree and fruit structure and development
Outstanding Color PhotographsMore than 150 outstanding color photographs, 36 black-and-white photos, and 60 line drawings and tables help identify some 100 different pest problems in strawberries, including insects, mites, diseases, weeds, nematodes, and vertebrates, as well as the common natural enemies of insects and mites.
Classic Reference Manual
"... should become a classic reference manual in strawberries an example of what a truly outstanding IPM manual should look like." — Craig Chandler, University of Florida
IPM for Strawberries

List of Contents

Integrated Pest Management for Strawberries
Strawberry Production in CaliforniaStrawberry Nurseries
Strawberry Growth and Development
Growth RequirementsDevelopmentThe CrownThe Root SystemRunners and Daughter Plant FormationFlowers and Fruit (Day Length)Chilling and Dormancy Planting Systems Winter Planting Summer Planting
Managing Pests in Strawberries
Pest IdentificationField Monitoring (Checking Potential Problems Before Planting Monitoring During the Season Soil and Water Sampling Weather Keeping Records) Control Action GuidelinesManagement Methods (Biological Control Certified Planting Material: Strawberry Certification Program Cultivar Selection Cultural Practices: Field Selection, Sanitation, Crop Rotation, Soil Solarization, Hot Water Treatments, Planting, Plant Establishment, Pruning, Polyethylene Mulch, Irrigation, Salinity Management, Fertilization, Harvesting and Handling Pesticides: Soil Fumigation, Pesticide Resistance, Pest Resurgence and Secondary Outbreaks, Crop Injury, Hazards to Humans, Hazards to Wildlife)
Insects and Mites
General Predators (Bigeyed Bugs Minute Pirate Bugs Lacewings Dusty Wings Damsel Bugs Cecidomyiid Fly Convergent Lady Beetle Spiders) Monitoring (Sampling)Twospotted Spider Mite (Description and Biology Damage Management: Cultural Practices, Biological Control, Monitoring and Treatment Thresholds, Pesticides) Lygus Bug (Description and Biology Damage Management: Cover Crops and Weed Hosts, Biological Control, Monitoring and Treatment Thresholds, Vacuum Removal)Other Plant Bugs Cyclamen Mites Aphids Root Weevils Strawberry Rootworm White Grubs Corn Earworm Other Caterpillar Pests (Cutworms Armyworms Leaf-Rolling Caterpillars: Garden Tortrix, Strawberry Leafroller, Omnivorous Leaftier Cabbage Looper Saltmarsh Caterpillar) Whiteflies European Earwig Western Flower Thrips Garden Symphylan Ground MealybugFruit Flies
Diseases
Field Monitoring and Diagnosis Prevention and Management (Certified Transplants Cultural Practices and Sanitation Soil Solarization Pesticides)Fruit Diseases (Gray Mold or Botrytis Rot Rhizopus Rot or Leak Mucor Fruit Rot Other Fruit Diseases: Powdery Mildew, Leather Rot, Anthracnose, Black Seed Disease, Phomopsis Fruit Rot, Tan-Brown Rot) Foliar Diseases (Common Leaf Spot Powdery Mildew Virus and Mycoplasma Diseases: Symptoms and Seasonal Development: Mottle, Crinkle, Mild Yellow Edge, Vein Banding, Necrotic Shock, Lethal Decline, Green Petal Management Angular Leaf Spot Phomopsis Leaf Blight Leaf Blotch Hainesta Leaf Spot and Fruit Rot) Root and Crown Diseases (Anthracnose Phytophthora Crown Rot Red Stele Root Rot Verticillium Wilt Black Root Rot Charcoal Rot) Abiotic Disorders (Nutrient Deficiencies: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Zinc, Boron, Iron Low Temperature Injury Salt Toxicity Pesticide lnjury Fruit Coloration Problems: Albino Fruit, Green Tip, White Shoulder)
Weeds
Management Methods (Field Selection and Sanitation Cultivation and Hand Weeding Crop Rotation Soil Solarization Polyethylene Mulch Herbicides) Monitoring and Identification of Weed Species Major Weed Species in Strawberries (Perennial Weeds Annual Broadleaf Weeds Annual Grasses)
Nematodes
Foliar Nematode Root-Knot Nematodes Nematode Management (Sampling for Nematodes Field Selection and Sanitation Crop Rotation Soil Fumigation Soil Solarization Certified Transplants Hot Water Treatments)
Vertebrates
Birds (House Finch Robin Goldfinches Cedar Waxwing Starling Long-billed Curlew Management Guidelines Noisemakers: Visual Repellents, Protective Netting, Trapping) California Ground Squirrel (Management Guidelines: Baits, Fumigation,Trapping) Meadow MicePocket Gophers Moles Mule Deer
Managing Strawberry Pests in the Home Garden
Choosing a Good Location Preparing the Soil Selecting Plants Planting Watering Fertilizing Mulching Pruning Rotating Plantings Treating the Soil Pest Problems (Monitoring Biological Control Cultural Controls Using Pesticides) Slugs and Snails Sowbugs Spider Mites Cyclamen Mites Earwigs Root Weevils Aphids Caterpillar Pests Lygus Bugs Gray Mold (Botrytis Rot and Other Fruit Decays) Phytophthora Root and Crown Rot Verticillium Wilt Powdery Mildew Leaf Spot Diseases Viruses Weeds Birds and Other Wildlife References
Glossary

How to Order

Integrated Pest Management for StrawberriesPublication 3351 - Published 1994Price $30.00 - 142 pages - ISBN 1-879906-08-2 (Currently out of stock)

This publication is available from the UC ANR Communication Services catalog. It is also available by mail; by telephone; at the ANR sales office in Oakland; and at many of the UC County Cooperative Extension offices. For more information, see "How to Order Publications."

Cultivation

Strawberry varieties vary remarkably in size, color, flavor, shape, degree of fertility, season of ripening, liability to disease and constitution of plant. Some vary in foliage, and some vary materially in the relative development of their sexual organs. In most cases the flowers appear hermaphroditic in structure, but function as either male or female.

For purposes of commercial production, plants are propagated from runners and generally distributed as either bare root plants or plugs. Cultivation follows one of two models, annual plasticulture or a perennial system of matted rows or mounds. A small amount of strawberries are also produced in greenhouses during the off season.

The bulk of modern commercial production uses the plasticulture system. In this method, raised beds are formed each year and covered with black plastic, which prevents weed growth and erosion, under which is run irrigation tubing. Plants, usually obtained from northern nurseries, are planted through holes punched in this covering. Runners are removed from the plants as they appear, to encourage the plants to put most of their energy into fruit development. At the end of the harvest season, the plastic is removed and the plants are plowed into the ground. Because strawberry plants more than a year or two old begin to decline in productivity and fruit quality, this system of replacing the plants each year allows for improved yields and more dense plantings. However, because it requires a longer growing season to allow for establishment of the plants each year, and because of the increased costs in terms of forming and covering the mounds and purchasing plants each year, it is not always practical in all areas. The other major method is to maintain the same plants from year to year. The runners of established plants should be allowed to root in the soil adjoining the plants, which should, therefore, be kept light and fine, or layered into small pots as for forcing. As soon as a few leaves are produced on each the secondary runners should be stopped. When the plants have become well-rooted they should at once be planted out. They do best in a rather strong loam, and should be kept tolerably moist. The ground should be trenched 50-100 cm deep, and supplied with plenty of manure, a good proportion of which should lie just below the roots, 25-30 cm from the surface. The plants may be put in on an average about 50-60 cm apart.

The plantation should be renewed every second or third year, or less frequently if kept free of runners, if the old leaves are cut away after the fruit has been gathered, and if a good top-dressing of rotten dung or leaf mold is applied. A top-dressing of loam is beneficial if applied before the plants begin to grow in spring, but after that period they should not be disturbed during the summer either at root or at top. If the plants produce a large number of flower-scapes, each should, if fine large fruit is desired, have them reduced to about four of the strongest. The lowest blossoms on the scape will be found to produce the largest, earliest and best fruits. The fruit should not be gathered until it is quite ripe, and then, if possible, it should be quite dry, but not heated by the sun. Those intended for preserving are best taken without the stalk and the calyx.

A mulching of straw manure put between the rows in spring serves to keep the ground moist and the fruit clean, as well as to afford nourishment to the plants. Unless required, the runners are cut off early, in order to promote the swelling of the fruit. The plants are watered during dry weather after the fruit is set, and occasionally until it begins to colour. As soon as the fruit season is over, the runners are again removed, and the ground hoed and raked.


Fragaria × ananassa 'Chandler' , a short day commercial variety grown in California.Strawberries are often grouped according to their flowering habit. Traditionally, this has consisted of a division between "June-bearing" strawberries, which bear their fruit in the early summer and "Ever-bearing" strawberries, which often bear several crops of fruit throughout the season. More recently, research has shown that strawberries actually occur in three basic flowering habits: short day, long day, and day neutral. These refer to the day length sensitivity of the plant and the type of photoperiod which induces flower formation. Day neutral cultivars produce flowers regardless of the photoperiod. Most commercial strawberries are either short day or day neutral.

While rarely if ever done commercially, strawberries may also be propagated by seed, and a few seed propagated cultivars have been developed for home use. Seeds are acquired commercially or saved from fruit ripened early in the summer. They may at once be sown, either in a sheltered border outdoors or in pots, or better in March under glass, when they will produce fruits in June of the same year. The soil should be rich and light, and the seeds very slightly covered by sifting over them some leaf-mould or old decomposed cow dung. When the plants appear and have made five or six leaves, they are transplanted to where they are to remain for bearing. The seeds sown in pots may be helped on by gentle heat, and when the plants are large enough they are pricked out in fine rich soil, and in June transferred to the open ground for bearing.

p(art)


More of these!


Flavoured Strawberries


rOSENQUIST cOLLECTION

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Image from Image


On http://www.openfluxus.com/ I discovered this image that "image" from Italy made for me!

Friday, February 29, 2008

Reply by Claudio Romeo


On the Fluxus Group OPEN FLUXUS I started a small group Strawberry Fluxus House, in which Claudio Romeo added this image. Very funny!

Champagne and Strawberries

The Beatles - Strawberry Fields Forever

Released on November 27, 1967
From the Magical Mystery Tour album

Written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney

Lyrics:
Let me take you down, cos I'm going to Strawberry Fields
Nothing is real and nothing to get hung about
Strawberry Fields forever

Living is easy with eyes closed
Misunderstanding all you see
It's getting hard to be someone but it all works out
It doesn't matter much to me
Let me take you down, cos I'm going to Strawberry Fields
Nothing is real and nothing to get hung about
Strawberry Fields forever

No one I think is in my tree
I mean it must be high or low
That is you can't you know tune in but it's all right
That is I think it's not too bad
Let me take you down, cos I'm going to Strawberry Fields
Nothing is real and nothing to get hung about
Strawberry Fields forever

Always, no sometimes, think it's me
But you know I know when it's a dream
I think I know I mean a "Yes" but it's all wrong
That is I think I disagree
Let me take you down, cos I'm going to Strawberry Fields
Nothing is real and nothing to get hung about
Strawberry Fields forever
Strawberry Fields forever
Strawberry Fields forever

[Cranberry sauce...]

How to Keep Strawberries Fresh

People often want to know the best way to keep strawberries fresh. From our studies, we have found the best method to be removing all of the moldy or damaged ones and placing the good strawberries in the refridgerator in layers separated by paper towels inside a plastic container or sealed bag. This works great for short term storage- up to 3 days.


For anything longer than that, the strawberries will need to be frozen in a sealed plastic bag. Whatever storage method you use, do not wash the strawberries before storing them. Wait until you plan to eat them to rinse them off to ensure freshness.

source: http://www.strawberries.com/

300 Strawberries


Strawberries with Chocolate


Eat them!

Image from Claudio Romeo Italy

STRAWBERRY PIE animation short

The Strawberry Patch - Animated Short Film

Strawberry Tales....

Strawberry tortured

Monday, February 25, 2008

Eating Strawberries in Stuttgart

Ripe


Growing Strawberries

Types

June bearing or spring bearing, everbearing and day neutral are the three types of strawberries grown in Illinois. Fruits of day neutral plants and everbearers are usually smaller than June-bearers fruit.

June bearing strawberries produce a crop during a two-to-three week period in the spring. June-bearers produce flowers, fruits and runners. They are classified into early, mid-season and late varieties.

Everbearing strawberries produce three periods of flowers and fruit during the spring, summer and fall. Everbearers do not produce many runners.

Day neutral strawberries will produce fruit throughout the growing season. These strawberries produce just a few runners.

Everbearing and day neutral strawberries are great for gardeners who have limited space. They can be grown in terraced beds, barrels or pyramids. They can also be used as an edging plant or a groundcover.

Strawberry Varieties

Strawberry varieties should be selected on the basis of dessert quality; preserving quality; disease resistance and season of maturation.

Strawberry cultivars for Illinois, listed by season from earliest to latest within groups and disease resistance

When to Plant

Plant strawberries as soon as the ground can be worked in the spring. This is usually in March or April allowing the plants to become well established before the hot weather arrives. Do not work the soil if it is wet. Wait a few days until it dries.

Planting Depth

Try to plant strawberries on a cloudy day or during the late afternoon. Set the strawberry plant in the soil so that the soil is just covering the tops of the roots. Do not cover the crown. After four or five weeks, the plants will produce runners and new daughter plants.

The center plant is set correctly, with the soil just covering the tops of the roots. The plant on the left is set too shallow; the plant on the right too deep.


Planting Systems

Matted Row Systems

This system is the best for growing June-bearing cultivars. In this system, the strawberry plants should be set eighteen to thirty inches apart in rows three to four feet apart. Daughter plants are allowed to root freely to become a matted row no wider than two feet.

Spaced-Row Systems

This system limits the number of daughter plants that grow from a mother plant. The mother plants are set eighteen to thirty inches apart in rows three to four feet apart. The daughter plants are spaced to root no closer than four inches apart. All other runners are pulled or cut from the mother plants. Even though more care is needed under this system, advantages include higher yields, larger berries and fewer disease problems.

Hill System

This is the best system for growing day-neutral and everbearing strawberries. In this system all the runners are removed so only the original mother plant remains. Removing the runners causes the mother plant to develop more crowns and flower stalks. Multiple rows are arranged in groups of two, three or four plants with a two foot walkway between each group of rows. Plants are set about one foot apart in multiple rows. During the first two or three weeks of growth, the planting should be weeded; then the bed should be mulched.

General Care

Strawberries are among the most widely grown fruit in the home garden. Strawberries prefer a well drained soil, high in organic matter. They need full sun for the highest yields, at least 6 hours per day. Do not plant strawberries where peppers, tomatoes, eggplant and potatoes have been grown. These plants could harbor verticillium wilt, a serious strawberry disease. Strawberries need about one inch of water per week during the growing season.

Blossom Removal

During the first growing season, remove flowers of June-bearing strawberries as soon as they appear. Removing the flowers promotes root and runner development thereby insuring a large crop the following year.

For everbearing and day-neutral strawberries, remove the flowers until the end of June and then after that date allow the flowers to remain to set fruit for a summer/fall harvest.

Fertilization

Before planting apply one pound per 100 square feet of a 10-10-10 fertilizer and dig into soil at least six to eight inches deep. After the first harvest in the second season strawberries should be fertilized after renovation in July. Water the fertilizer in to get it down to the root zone. This application is made to keep the plants in a vigorous condition and to promote new growth causing the development of more fruit buds. Do not over fertilize. Overfertilization will cause excessive vegetative growth, reduce yields; increase losses from frost and foliar disease and result in winter injury.

Mulching

Strawberries are very susceptible to frosts in the spring. Mulches that have covered the plants during the winter months should be removed in the early spring but should be left in the aisles to cover the blossoms in the spring when frost is predicted. Old blankets or sheets can be used for protection against frost. Spun bond material such as Reemay or row covers will protect strawberry plantings down to temperatures of about 23°-25°F. In the fall between mid-November and mid-December in Illinois but before temperatures drop below 20 degrees; apply a straw mulch three to four inches deep over the rows. This mulch will protect the plants from cold temperatures that can kill the buds and injure roots and crowns. Remove the mulch in the spring when the strawberry leaves show yellow. Leave some of the mulch around the plants to keep the fruit from soil contact and to conserve soil moisture.

Renovation

Renovation is an important part of strawberry care. In order to insure good fruit production, June-bearing strawberries grown in the matted row system should be renovated every year right after harvest. A strawberry patch will continue to be productive for three to four years as long as the planting is maintained. The first step in the renovation process is to mow the old foliage with a mower, cutting off the leaves about one inch above the crowns. Rake the leaves and if disease-free, compost or incorporate into the soil. Fertilize with one pound of a 10-10-10 fertilizer per 100 square feet. Narrow the rows to six to twelve inches wide by spading, hoeing or rototilling. Remove all weeds. Thin the plants in the narrowed row to 4 to 6 inches between plants. Water with one inch of water per week to promote growth and to make new runners for next year's crop.

Ingmar Bergman - Wild Strawberries



Jammy

Strawberry Historical Facts

Strawberries are thought to have been cultivated in ancient Rome. The strawberry, as we know it, was originally grown in northern Europe, but species are also found in Russia, Chile, and the United States. The berries seem to be strewn among the leaves of the plant. The plant first had the name strewberry, which later was changed to strawberry. In France strawberries were cultivated in the 13th Century for useas a medicinal herb.

Historical Medicinal Uses of Fragaria Vesca (Alpine Strawberry):It is said that the leaves, roots and fruits of this variety of strawberry were used for a digestive or skin tonic. Internally, the berry was used for diarrhoea and digestive upset, while the leaves and the roots were used for gout. Externally, it was used for sunburn and skin blemishes, and the fruit juice was used for discoloured teeth.

The first American species of strawberries was cultivated about 1835. The first important American variety, the Hoveg, was grown in 1834, in Massachusetts. The hybrid variety was developed in France. The strawberry is considered one of the most important small fruits grown in the Western Hemisphere. Today every state in the United States and every province in Canada grows the strawberry plant.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Wild Strawberries

Red Roof Farm


New and Fresh


Strawberry News

Strawberry News

Yahoo! News Search Results for Strawberries

Going the way of the strawberries (Merced Sun-Star) Strawberry fields forever.

Take Advantage Of The Versatility Of Strawberries (The Tampa Tribune) It's time to pay our respects to that bright-red, heart-shaped orb that delights: the strawberry.

Bel Air's tasty tradition (Baltimore Sun) Chocolate Festival to offer favorites, new confections Hundreds of chocolate lovers will descend upon downtown Bel Air on Saturday.

Divorcees party it up in Las Vegas (Los Angeles Times) The newly divorced toast their freedom -- and trash their ex-spouses -- at ever more elaborate gatherings in the nation's party capital. For parting partners, Las Vegas can be the Shangri-La of the quickie divorce. It takes only six weeks to no-fault freedom, and if you know how to play the game, it can take as few as 16 days.

Eat Your Garden Edible ornamentals offer a feast for more than the eyes (Seattle Times) by Valerie Easton IT'S NEARLY TIME to plant, and not just primroses and hellebores and sweet peas. This year the excitement seems to be...

Off the rack: Entertainment (Toronto Star) Cover: Well, isn't that just the saddest thing ever? Britney's unfortunate(-looking) children aren't even allowed to talk to her on the phone anymore. Kevin Federline is all kinds of concerned about her being a bad influence.

SCHOOL MENUS (Bradenton Herald) Elementary school

Project to document braceros' stories (Ventura County Star) CSU Channel Islands is teaming with the Smithsonian Institution to document the lives of braceros who once worked in Ventura County's fields and citrus orchards.

Southern HospitalityMystic society hosts 61st annual Valentine Ball (Montgomery Advertiser) Of all the celebrations for sweethearts last week, the Maskers 61st annual Valentine Ball was the most elaborate showcase in the River Region.

Deals: Omni Hotels (The Record) The deal: Get Your Glam On package at Omni Hotels nationwide and in Canada and Mexico. Gather your friends for a weekend of fun at one of the 31 participating hotels offering this girls-only package.

Internet Firm

Nieuwe website voor IUCN NL

Het Amsterdamse internetbureau Strawberries heeft een geheel nieuwe website ontwikkeld voor IUCN NL, het Nederlandse comité van de natuurbeschermingsorganisatie International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Strawberries ontwerp van de nieuwe website van het IUCN NL presenteert alle informatie duidelijker en toegankelijker aan de gebruiker. De website kent daarnaast veel meer mogelijkheden dan de oude versie. Zo ontsluit een uitgebreid zoekfilter de projectendatabase Pluriform en maakt de website de samenwerking voor alle IUCN-units eenvoudiger door een groot aantal koppelingen. De website wordt centraal beheerd met een nieuw content managementsysteem.

MilkShake

Strawberry (soy)milkshake

serves 2

500g fresh strawberries (I used Mara des bois, which are very tasty and rather sweet)
400ml soy milk, ice cold

Wash the strawberries and put the in a food mixer. Add the soymilk and blitz for a minute or so.
Put in glasses and top with fresh strawberries.
Drink as soon as it’s ready.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Thursday, February 14, 2008

My bed


Fuzz-Free Strawberries


Fuzz-free strawberries forecast with new food safety treatment
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Open up a pint of strawberries from the grocery store, and more often than not you'll find a fuzzy berry or two in the mix. A blast of chlorine dioxide gas, however, promises to not only keep those berries fuzz-free, but also to kill off harmful bacteria living on their surface more efficiently than methods currently used by the food industry, say Purdue University researchers.

"Strawberries are tricky," said Rich Linton, professor of food science and one of the leaders of the current study on decontaminating strawberries. "They're notoriously difficult to clean, and their surface composition actually encourages bugs to grow."
Those bugs can include potentially lethal bacteria, such as E. coli, as well as viruses including hepatitis A, which caused an outbreak linked to frozen strawberries in 1996.
"The issue with strawberries is that they're easily contaminated," Linton said. "They're grown in close association with soil, where they may pick up pathogens such as E. coil from manure-based fertilizers, and they're hand-picked, providing another avenue for contamination."
Linton and his colleagues at Purdue's Center for Food Safety Engineering, who already have demonstrated the efficacy of using chlorine dioxide gas to kill pathogens on the surface of apples and green peppers, have shown the treatment also removes significantly higher levels of pathogens than the current industry-standard chlorinated water rinse.
Linton's study, published in the current issue of the Journal of Food Protection, compares two different chlorine dioxide treatments, called "batch processing" and "continuous processing." Both treatments provide greater than a 5-log, or 99.999 percent, reduction in the numbers of E. coli and Listeria monocytogenes on strawberry surfaces.
Food safety experts assess decontamination efficiency with a measurement called "log reduction," which indicates how much contamination can be reduced after a decontamination treatment. A log, or logarithm, is a power of ten; thus a 1-log reduction is a 90 percent reduction; a 2-log reduction is a 99 percent reduction, and a 5-log reduction is a 99.999 percent reduction.
While current methods for removing pathogens on strawberries yield about a 2.5 log reduction in bacteria levels, the Food and Drug Administration has stated produce treatments should achieve a 5-log reduction in pathogens.
Not only does Linton's treatment significantly reduce the number of potentially harmful pathogens growing on strawberries, it also extends their shelf life without sacrificing quality attributes such as color and taste.
"The berries last a lot longer after this treatment-in fact, we've had strawberries in the refrigerator for more than six weeks with no mold growth," Linton said.
"If this process can give consumers even one or two more days before the strawberries they buy get fuzzy, that's huge. Think about it - how many strawberries do you have to throw away in a pint? If we could reduce that number, it would be a great advantage for consumers and the industry."
The two methods Linton used differ in the way the berries are exposed to the chlorine dioxide. In a batch system, the strawberries are placed in a sealed container, and a set amount of chlorine dioxide gas is applied once and then allowed to remain in the chamber for a period of time. Continuous treatment involves constant delivery of gas into the chamber over time.
Batch treatment required higher concentrations of chlorine dioxide treatment for longer amounts of time than continuous treatment, but both methods achieved more than a 5-log reduction in pathogens, Linton said.
He found that either 30 minutes of batch treatment, or 10 minutes of continuous treatment, produced effective levels of decontamination.
Linton's team currently has funding through the United States Department of Agriculture to scale up this technology and further develop it for use by the food industry.
"We see this technology as a potential intervention for security applied to our food system," Linton said. "It may be possible to develop this technology so that we can begin decontaminating produce while it's in transit.
"Much of our produce comes from other countries where we may have less control over sanitary practices in the field. If we could use technology like this to seal up produce and treat it as it travels from point A to point B, it's a great application for protection of our nation's food supply."
Also participating in this research were Yingchan Han, post-doctoral research associate; Travis Selby and Krista Schultze, graduate students in the Department of Food Science; and Phil Nelson, professor of food science. The U.S. Department of Agriculture Cooperative State esearch and Extension Service and the Food and Drug Administration provided funding for this work.
Writer: Jennifer Cutraro, (765) 496-2050, jcutraro@purdue.edu
Source: Rich Linton, (765) 494-6481, linton@purdue.edu
Ag Communications: (765) 494-2722; Beth Forbes, forbes@purdue.eduAgriculture News Page

Related Web sites:Purdue University Home Page

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Image gift from Roland


"Mit Gutem Gewissen" Strawberries from Roland. (He posted them for me on Fluxlist Europe: http://fluxlisteurope.blogspot.com)

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Strawberry Law

From: Kevin McManaman


For your information, I recently read a state supreme court opinion dealing with strawberries. Believe it or not, the Nebraska Supreme Court very recently decided an opinion dealing with the methods of sale for strawberries in stores. Apparently the Uniform Weights and Measures Act adopted by many states says that one can sell small berries, in this case strawberries, "by weight or by volume" and the state inspectors decided in all their wisdom that a store cannot sell them both by weight and by volume in the same store at the same time, although they could sell by weight one day and the next day by the pint, half-pint, etc. The store commissioned a survey and over 80% wanted them sold both ways and the rest didn't care. Nevertheless, the state prohibited such a sale method because it would confuse patrons as to which was the better deal. As a result, the little old lady must by an entire half pint with the mouldy ones at the bottom in order to have strawberries for her cereal. She cannot buy just two hand picked strawberries. Or else she can only buy by the pound. It is up to the store to decide the only way to sell 'em that day and she cannot choose. They are prohibited from entering any other sold of a sale method than one of the two mentioned above at a single time. The case name is Baker's vs. Dept. of Agriculture, and is only 2 weeks old. [as of Jan. 4, 1996--JAMM]

Growing Strawberries

Types

June bearing or spring bearing, everbearing and day neutral are the three types of strawberries grown in Illinois. Fruits of day neutral plants and everbearers are usually smaller than June-bearers fruit.

June bearing strawberries produce a crop during a two-to-three week period in the spring. June-bearers produce flowers, fruits and runners. They are classified into early, mid-season and late varieties.

Everbearing strawberries produce three periods of flowers and fruit during the spring, summer and fall. Everbearers do not produce many runners.

Day neutral strawberries will produce fruit throughout the growing season. These strawberries produce just a few runners.

Everbearing and day neutral strawberries are great for gardeners who have limited space. They can be grown in terraced beds, barrels or pyramids. They can also be used as an edging plant or a groundcover.

Strawberry Varieties

Strawberry varieties should be selected on the basis of dessert quality; preserving quality; disease resistance and season of maturation.

Strawberry cultivars for Illinois, listed by season from earliest to latest within groups and disease resistance

Support from Roland Halbritter in Germany


I found this image in http://fluxlisteurope.blogspot.com/ after I published my portrait there. Roland made this surprise for me. What an inventive photo....! Thank you Roland
He wrote: "Tanja Vos together with three guys in a too low aerea"

Tuesday, January 15, 2008