Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

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BLBS102-c38 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 14:17 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come


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Thermal Processing Principles


Yetenayet Bekele Tola and Hosahalli S. Ramaswamy


Introduction
Thermal Processing Basics
Introduction
Reaction Rate
Zero-Order Reaction
First-Order Reaction
Second-Order Reaction
Common Food Microorganisms
Thermal Resistance of Food Microorganisms
Kinetics of Microbial Death
Decimal Reduction Time and Thermal Death Time
Temperature Dependency of Kinetic Parameters
Concepts of Process Lethality
Thermal Process Determination Methods
General Method
Original General Method
Improved General Method
Formula Methods
Characterization of Heat Penetration Data
Heat Penetration Parameters
The Retort CUT,fhandjhVa l u e s
Stumbo’s Method
Quality Optimization
High-Temperature Short-Time and Ultra-High
Temperature Processing
Agitation Processing
Aseptic Processing
Thin Profile and Retort Pouch Processing
Novel Thermal Food Processing Technologies
Microwave and Radio Frequency Heating
Ohmic Heating
Novel Nonthermal Processing Technologies
High-Pressure Processing
Pulsed Electric Field
Retort Types for Commercial Application
Batch Retorts
Steam Heating Retort
Water Heating Retort (Immersion and Spray Modes)

Steam-Air Heating Retort
Continuous Retorts
References

Abstract:Food intended for human consumption must be produced
in safe and stable forms to ensure availability, distribution, as well
as normal growth and development. Thus, foods are processed in
various forms to achieve these desired effects. Thermal process-
ing entails the application of heat energy for food transformation
into the desired safe and stable forms. This chapter describes the
basic principles of thermal processing and surveys conventional ver-
sus novel thermal processing methods currently available for food
transformation.

INTRODUCTION


Food processing is used to transform and/or preserve raw ingre-
dients from the farm into various food forms for consumption
by human being. Food processing often takes clean, harvested
produce or edible portions and uses them to produce attractive
and marketable food products. Fresh agricultural products (plant
and animal origin), due to their high moisture content, are highly
perishable and can be kept only for a short period of time. Es-
pecially during peak harvesting seasons, due to large volume
of these products, unless and otherwise pertinent measures are
taken, the problem leads to spoilage and high economic losses.
Furthermore, food products should be available throughout the
year in market to fulfill the demand of consumers in all seasons.
To do this, we need to minimize postharvest losses and preserve
agricultural products in a safe way with no or minimum quality
loss. The major emphasis of food processing is shelf life exten-
sion by preventing undesirable changes in the wholesomeness,
nutritive value, and sensory qualities (Ramaswamy and Marcotte
2006).

Food Biochemistry and Food Processing, Second Edition. Edited by Benjamin K. Simpson, Leo M.L. Nollet, Fidel Toldr ́a, Soottawat Benjakul, Gopinadhan Paliyath and Y.H. Hui.
©C2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published 2012 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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