New Development In Progress for Greenhouse-Grown Snacking Peppers

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In partnership with the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research, researchers in the Virginia Tech University School of Plant and Environmental Sciences and the Department of Food Science and Technology are developing snacking peppers suitable for growing in controlled agriculture environments.

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Bingyu Zhao, a Professor in the School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, and Yun Yin, an assistant professor in the Department of Food Science and Technology, are the minds behind the process.

“Our work centers on making the plant compact and accelerating growth all while maintaining the color, scent, nutrition, and sweetness,” says Zhao, the principal investigator of the project and affiliated faculty member of the Center for Advanced Innovation in Agriculture. “The plants need to be able to grow in a crowded environment while maintaining high yield rates to ensure profitability.”

The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences created the Center for Advanced Innovation in Agriculture to spearhead work on a changing agricultural landscape and to develop and evaluate needed modifications in agricultural production through informed scientific discovery and technology-driven innovation. This includes controlled environment agriculture.

In his lab, Zhao will develop the plant with guidance from Yin, whose expertise is food chemistry, and will develop protocols to measure and evaluate the pepper’s flavor experience to ensure it is better than or equal to its outdoor counterpart.

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“Flavor-important components will be evaluated and determined through instrumental and sensory combined techniques,” Yin says. “We will also look into nutritional value of cultivars suitable for controlled environment agriculture production.”

For more, continue reading at GreenhouseGrower.com.

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