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Why Do Sliced Apples Turn Brown?

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You open your lunch box to discover that the lovely apple you sliced this morning now appears unsightly and brown. Why does this happen? This unappetizing phenomenon is actually due to a chain of biochemical reactions known as “enzymatic browning.” When an apple is injured (or cut into pieces), the plant tissue is exposed to oxygen. This triggers an enzyme known as polyphenol oxidase (PPO) to—wait for it—oxidize polyphenols in the apple’s flesh. This results in new chemicals (o-quinones), which then react with amino acids to produce brown-colored melanins. Different apple varieties contain different amounts of both the initial enzyme and the polyphenols, and thus they brown at different rates.

Enzymatic browning is not unique to apples. Pears, bananas, and eggplants also turn brown fairly quickly when cut. Enzymatic browning is also responsible for the desirable dark color of prunes, coffee, black tea, and cocoa. To reduce browning in apples, keep the slices refrigerated to slow the reaction. You can also coat them with lemon or pineapple juice. The acids in these juices slow the reaction, and the antioxidants inhibit it. If you don't mind the added sugar, covering the slices with honey, caramel, or sugar syrup effectively blocks their exposure to oxygen. Scientists are working to genetically engineer apples that do not produce the PPO enzyme, so perhaps brown apples will someday be a thing of the past.