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FDE311 Module8

The document discusses pasteurization and sterilization processes for liquid and packaged foods. It describes how foods are heated to high temperatures to destroy microbes and extend shelf life. Batch and continuous pasteurization methods are outlined, as well as the use of hot water, steam, and plate heat exchangers. Considerations for container type and size, and food properties like pH and viscosity are covered. The concepts of thermal death time and commercial sterility are also introduced.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
23 views

FDE311 Module8

The document discusses pasteurization and sterilization processes for liquid and packaged foods. It describes how foods are heated to high temperatures to destroy microbes and extend shelf life. Batch and continuous pasteurization methods are outlined, as well as the use of hot water, steam, and plate heat exchangers. Considerations for container type and size, and food properties like pH and viscosity are covered. The concepts of thermal death time and commercial sterility are also introduced.

Uploaded by

dilaraaaydiin742
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Equipment

Pasteurisation of packaged foods

• Some liquid foods (e.g. beers & fruit juices) are


pasteurised after filling into containers.

• Hot water
 glass container
 max. temperature differences between container &
water, 20ºC (heating) & 10ºC (cooling)  to reduce
the risk of thermal shock to the container

• Steam–air mixtures or hot water


 metal or plastic containers.
• Containers are cooled to appr. 40ºC to evaporate
surface water
 minimise external corrosion to container or cap
 accelerate setting of label adhesives.

• Hot-water pasteurisers  batch or continuous.

Batch
 a water bath,

 crates of packaged food are heated to a pre-set


temperature & held for the required length of time.

 cold water is pumped in to cool product.


Continuous
 a long narrow trough and a conveyor belt
• containers through heating &
cooling stages.

 a tunnel divided into heating zones.


• very fine (atomised) water sprays heat
containers through each zone on a conveyor,
• incremental rises in temperature
until pasteurisation is achieved.
• water sprays cool containers.
• Savings in energy & water consumption
 water recirculation between preheat sprays,
 water used to heat the packaged food in
pasteurisation is
 (before pasteurisation) pre-heated by the
hot products.
 (after pasteurisation) then cooled by
the incoming food between cooling zones

Steam tunnels
 faster, shorter, & smaller.
• Temperatures in heating zones are gradually
increased
 by reducing amount of air in steam–air
mixtures.
• Cooling takes place using fine sprays of water or
by immersion in a water bath.
Pasteurisation of unpackaged liquids
Open boiling pans
 small-scale batch of some liquid foods.

Plate HEs
 large scale of low viscosity liquids (e.g. milk, milk
products, fruit juices, liquid egg, beers & wines).

• Some products (e.g. fruit juices, wines) also require de-


aeration to prevent oxidative changes during storage.
 sprayed into a vacuum chamber
 dissolved air is removed by a vacuum pump, prior to
pasteurisation.
• Each plate is fitted with a synthetic rubber gasket
• The plates are corrugated to induce turbulence in the
liquids
 turbulence + high velocity induced by pumping
reduces thickness of boundary films  high heat transfer
coefficients.
Pasteurisation of unpackaged https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2013.09.022.
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S026087741300492
liquids 5)

In operation, food is pumped from a


balance tank to a ‘regeneration’
section where it is preheated by food
that has already been pasteurised.
It is then heated to pasteurising
temperature in a heating section and
passes through a holding tube,
where it is retained for the time
required to achieve pasteurisation.
If the pasteurising temperature is not
reached, a temperature sensor
activates a flow diversion valve that
automatically returns the food to the
The regeneration of heat in this way leads to
balance tank to be re-pasteurised. substantial savings in energy and up to 97% of the
The pasteurised product is then heat can be recovered. Heat recovery is calculated
cooled in the regeneration section using:
Heat recovery (%) = [(θ2– θ1)/ (θ3– θ1)]X100
(and simultaneously preheats where θ1(°C)=inlet temperature, θ2(°C)=preheating
incoming food) and then further temperature and θ3(°C)=pasteurisation temperature.
• Advantages of HEs over in-bottle processing:
– more uniform heat treatment
– simpler equipment & lower maintenance costs
– lower space & labour costs
– greater flexibility for different products
– greater control over pasteurisation conditions.
• spoilage & risks from pathogens
 from post-pasteurisation contamination,
 cleaning & hygiene

After pasteurisation, food is immediately


filled into cartons or bottles and sealed to
prevent recontamination

• Products should be stored at refrigerated


temperature until consumption.
Effect on foods
• minor changes to nutritional & sensory
characteristics of most foods.
• shelf life: few days or weeks

Effect: Colour, flavour and aroma


• Fruit juices
 colour deterioration
 enzymic browning by PPO.
 promoted by the presence of oxygen
 fruit juices are de-aerated prior to pasteurisation.
• Whiteness of raw milk & pasteurised milk differs
 due to homogenisation
 pasteurisation alone  no measurable effect.
• Other pigments in plant & animal products are
mostly unaffected.
• Small loss of volatile aroma compounds during
pasteurisation of juices.
• Volatile recovery may be used to produce high
quality juices.
• Loss of volatiles from raw milk removes a hay-
like aroma & produces a blander product.
Effect: Vitamin loss

• In fruit juices, losses of vitamin C & carotene are


minimised by de-aeration.

• Changes to milk are confined to a 5% loss of


serum (whey) proteins & small changes to
vitamin content.
Heat sterilisation
• unit operation; foods are heated sufficiently at high
temperature & for long time to destroy microbial &
enzyme activity.
• a shelf life > 6 mo at ambient temperatures.

• Severe heat treatment during the older process of in-


container sterilisation (canning) may produce substantial
changes in nutritional and sensory qualities of foods.
• Developments  to reduce damage to nutrients &
sensory components.

• Part 1: in-container heat sterilisation


• Part 2: UHT processes.
1. In-container sterilisation

heat resistance of
micro-organisms or enzymes

physical state
heating conditions
of food
How long to
sterilise a food?

container
pH of the food
size

• process time
 heat resistance of micro-organisms (spores) or enzymes
 rate of heat penetration into the food.
Heat resistance of micro-organisms

• Most heat resistant spores have a z value of


around 10ºC.

Low-acid foods (pH>4.5)


• Destruction of C. botulinum is a minimum
requirement of heat sterilisation.

• Normally, foods receive more than minimum


treatment as other more heat-resistant spoilage
bacteria may also be present.
More acidic foods (pH 4.5–3.7)

• other micro-organisms (e.g. yeasts and fungi) or


heat-resistant enzymes are used to establish
processing times and temperatures.

Acidic foods (pH < 3.7)

• enzyme inactivation (pasteurisation).


• Thermal destruction of micro-organisms
 logarithmically
 a sterile product cannot be produced with
certainty no matter how long the process time.

• The probability of survival of a single micro-


organism can be predicted
 using details of heat resistance of micro-
organism &
 temperature & time of heating.
 a concept kown as commercial sterility.
• E.g. a process that reduces cell numbers by 12 decimal
reductions (a 12D process), applied to a raw material
contains 1000 spores per container would reduce
microbial numbers to 10-9 per container, or the
probability of one microbial spore surviving in one billion
containers processed.

• Commercial sterility  inactivates substantially all micro-


organisms & spores which, if present, would be capable
of growing in food under defined storage conditions.

• The level of survival is determined by type of micro-


organism that is expected to contaminate raw material.

• A 12D process  C. botulinum is likely to be present in


low acid foods
• In practice a 2D to 8D process  most
economical level of food spoilage consistent with
adequate food quality & safety.
 microbial load on raw materials must be kept
at a low level.

• When C. botulinum grows & produces toxin in a


sealed container there is characteristic
production of gas which can cause visible
swelling of the container
(not the only cause of swelling).
Rate of heat penetration
• Heat is transferred from steam or pressurised water
through the container & into food.
• Generally the surface heat transfer coefficient is very high
and is not a limiting factor in heat transfer.

Type of product

Container type Container size

rate of heat penetration


into a food
Agitation of
Container shape
the container
Temperature
of the retort
• In cylindrical containers, the thermal centre is
at the geometric centre for conductive heating
foods
appr 1/3 up from the base of container for
convective heating foods.
• In convective heating, the exact position varies &
should be found experimentally.
• Convective heating is more rapid than
conductive heating & the rate depends mostly on
viscosity of food.
• In commercial processing, containers of viscous
food may be agitated to increase the rate of
convective heating.
• A broken heating
curve occurs when
a food is initially
heated by
convective heating
but then undergoes
a rapid transition to
conductive heating
(e.g. in foods which
contain a high
concentration of
starch which
undergoes a sol-to-
gel transition).
• The thermal death time (TDT) or F value
 basis for comparing heat sterilisation procedures.
 time required to achieve a specified reduction in
microbial numbers at a given temperature
 the total time–temperature combination received by a
food.

• a process operating at 115ºC based on a micro-


organism with a z value of 10ºC  F10 115

• F value  time to reduce microbial numbers by a


multiple of the D value.

• n1; n2 = initial; final number of micro-organisms.


• A reference F value (F0)  to describe processes that
operate at 121ºC which are based on a micro-organism
with a z value of 10ºC.
• Basis: different combinations of temperature & time have
the same lethal effect on micro-organisms.
• Temperature increases  logarithmic reduction in time
needed to destroy the same number of micro-organisms.
• The lethal rate (the reciprocal of TDT)

• θ (ºC) = temperature of heating.


• The TDT at a given processing temperature is compared
to a reference temperature (T) of 121ºC.
• E.g. if a product is processed at 115ºC and the most
heat-resistant micro-organism has a z value of 10ºC,
Lethal rate = 10(115-121)/10 = 0.25

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