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Advances In Nonthermal Food Processing Technologies

A Guide to the Latest Developments

Publication Date August 2007
Publisher Food Tech. Intelligence
Product Type Report
Pages 120
ISBN Number not applicable
Product Code FTI00014
Buy this product or for assistance call +44 20 7060 7474

Summary

  • Pulsed electric fields
  • High hydrostatic pressure
  • Steam pasteurization Irradiation
  • Electron beams

Why the interest in these techniques? Minimally processed, fresh-like products have become commonplace in the food industry. This is partly the result of consumer demand for high quality, yet minimally processed, additive-free and microbiologically safe foods. In an effort to continue to meet this demand, the industry is developing alternatives to the use of heat preservation to eliminate or reduce levels of bacteria in foods. Heat treatment destroys the functionality and flavors of many foods. Nonthermal processes offer an alternative.

Food Technology Intelligence, Inc., publisher of the newsletters Emerging Food R&D Report and Microbial Update International, has just made available a new revision of its popular report, Advances in Nonthermal Food Processing Technologies, analyzing recent advances in nonthermal processes. The report analyzes their commercial potential and their market availability.

As you know, the bacteria problem is a significant one facing food processors. While the incidence of traditional foodborne diseases, like trichinosis from undercooked pork and botulism from improperly canned foods, seems to be generally on the decline, each year millions of people become sick from disease-causing bacteria or viruses in poultry, shellfish and red meat.

In addition, emerging pathogens represent a major health risk to consumers. E. coli O157:H7 is one such pathogen. Historically, ground beef products have been associated with this type of E. coli, and most current beef burger manufacturing procedures do not adversely affect the survival of the organism.

Now you have an opportunity to learn more about a variety of nonthermal food preservation processes, under development at universities, companies and government research labs, that will help you get the microbial problem under better control. This report from Food Technology Intelligence reviews key processes and highlights important information, such as applications, status of development and when the processes will be commercially viable.

You'll also learn how to take advantage of these technologies-through licensing or other collaborative arrangments-so that you can commercialize them before your competitors do. Learn about several processes, including:

  • High hydrostatic pressure, in which foods are treated under high pressure, up to 6000 atm, by placing them in a medium, usually water in a thick-walled vessel, and compressing the medium. It will find use with uncooked seafood, fruits and vegetables, jams, jellies, preserves and the like. Collaborations are sought here.
  • Electron beams that do not require heat and destroy E. coli O157:H7. The technology focuses around a high-powered accelerator, a cathode ray tube similar to that found in a television set. When the beams hit E. coli, they interact with the microbe's DNA, deactivating it. Industrial collaborations are sought.
  • Dielectric heating used in the plywood industry to heat glue between layers of wood. Now scientists are trying to determine whether they can successfully treat alfalfa seeds with this technology to reduce the chance of spreading foodborne disease through the sprouts. The technique may be applicable to meats and seafood. Collaborations are available.
  • Extrusion and irradiation-a combination that can kill bacteria in beef products. Investigators found that extrusion cooking produces a beef snack stick with some surviving spores of C. sporogenes in vacuum bags. They added a low dose of irradiation, which killed all the spores that survived the extrusion cooking.

Advances in Nonthermal Food Processing Technologies will help you focus in on strategic developments in the field. This report will help you establish important contacts with key developers of technologies that will keep you ahead of your competitors. Complete and return your order form today.

Content

  • 1. Executive Summary
    • Perspective
    • Scope And Methodology
    • Thermal Processing Not
    • Always Appropriate
    • General Bacteria Of Concern
    • Impact
    • Current Processes
    • Challenges And The Need For Alternatives
  • 2. New Technologies
    • High Hydrostatic Pressure
    • Irradiation
    • Electron Beams
    • Lasers
    • Ozone
    • Nontraditional Ohmic Heating
    • Antimicrobial Protein
    • Non-Thermal Plasma Technology
    • Radio Frequency-Based Energy
    • Microbiological Criteria
    • Ultraviolet Radiation
    • Pulsed Electric Fields
    • Electrolyzed Water
    • Steam Condensation And Pasteurization
    • Hurdle Technology
    • Electrochemical Technology
    • Electrical Sourcing
    • Bacteriocins
    • Combined Treatments
    • Hydrogen Peroxide
    • Lactoferrin
  • 3. Patents
  • 4. For Further Reading

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