- Author: Diane Nelson
Published on: December 23, 2010
![3767 026[1]](https://ucanr.edu/blogs/food/blogfiles/5750small.jpg)
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I don’t know if plant scientists make better chefs, but knowledge of plant science can certainly improve our cooking. Take, for example, understanding how to handle oxidation, the interaction between oxygen molecules and all the many substances they may contact. Oxidation is what makes your fender rust and your copper penny turn green. As it relates to plants, oxidation is what causes fresh-cut produce to turn brown and wine to lose its flavor when left too long in an open bottle.
Perhaps you know how to thwart oxidation when preparing potatoes and serving sliced apples (and if not, we’ll get to that in a minute) but here is a less-common food that often falls victim to oxidation: pesto. Has this happened to you? You gather an...
Tags: basil (1), fresh-cut produce (1), oxidation (1), UC Davis Department of Plant Sciences (5), UC Davis Olive Center (2), UC Davis Postharvest Technology Center (2)
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