Food Preservation
Food preservation involves the action taken to maintain foods with the desired properties or nature
for as long as possible.
Traditional Method for Food Preservation
1.COOKING
Cooking is a heating process, the primary object of which is to produce a more palatable food. The
word "cooking" is broad term embodying at least six form of heating including; baking, broiling
roasting, boiling, frying and stewing. The method of applying heat energy and the duration differ
somewhat for each of these processes. Baking, broiling and roasting usually required dry heat at
relatively high temperature greater than 100°C), boiling and stewing are done by placing the product
in boiling water and frying involves cooking oil and temperatures much greater than 100°C. Two
preservative changes occur in food as a result of cooking:
(i) destruction or reduction of microorganisms and
(ii) Inactivation of undesirable enzymes
(III) Destruction of potentially hazardous toxin present naturally or through micro
organisms
(IV) Alteration of color, flavor and texture and
(V) Improve digestibility of food.
Undesirable changes also may occur such as degradation of nutritive component
and sensory attributes. Principles which can be applied to describe the effect of cooking
on reduction of microorganisms and enzymes also can be applied to other changes
occurring during cooking.
2. BLANCHING
Blanching of fruits and vegetables is done by immersing them in hot/boiled water or
steam by exposing them to live steam or hot air for a proper period (2-5 min) of time
followed by cooling. The extent of blanching varies with food. Fruits are generally not
blanched leaving the oxidizing enzyme system active. Blanching is a thermal treatment to
be done prior to freezing, drying and canning for the following purposes:
(a) It inactivates most of the plant enzymes which cause harness, discoloration
(polyphenol oxidase), off flavor (peroxidase), softening and loss of nutritive value.
(b) The reduction of area of leafy vegetables and facilitate their easy handling.
(c) Removes tissue gases which reduce Sulphides.
(d) To destroy the microorganisms to about 99%.
(e) Enhance green color of vegetables like peas, broccoli and spinach.
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(f) To remove undesirable acids and astringent taste of the peel and spinach.
(g) Removes the skin of vegetables such as beetroot and tomatoes which helps in their
peeling.
Two of the most heat resistant and widely distributed enzymes in plant tissues are
peroxidase and catalase. Activity of these enzymes, therefore, can be used to evaluate
the effectiveness of a blanching treatment. The heating time necessary to destroy
catalase or peroxidase depends on the type of fruits and vegetables, the method of
heating medium, the size of the fruit and vegetables and the temperature of heating
medium. Heating media other than water (e.g. steam, hot air, and microwave) and at
temperatures other than 100°C can be used blanching time should not be more than 5
minutes.
3. PASTEURIZATION
The pasteurization is thermal process in which the harmful pathogen/ microorganism are
partially destroyed at predetermined time and temperatures. The high temperature and
short time (HTST) method involves a comparatively high temperature for a short time
(71.6°C for 15 second for milk), whereas the low temperature and long-time procedure
involves, relatively low temperature for longer time (e.g. 62.7°C for 30 minutes for milk).
Optimization process depends on the relative destruction rate of organisms as compared
to quality factors, but generally the HTST process results in maximum product quality. The
time temperature treatment used in pasteurization depends on:
(i) The heat resistance of the particular vegetative or pathogenic microorganism. The
process is designed to destroy, and
(ii) The sensitivity of product quality to heat.
4. STERILIZATION
Sterilization refers to complete destruction of microorganisms. Because of the resistance
of certain bacterial spores to heat, this frequently requires a treatment of at least 121°C
of wet heat for 15 min or its equivalent. It also means that every particle of the food must
receive this heat treatment.
If a can of food is to be sterilized, then immersing it at 121°C into pressure cooker or retort
for 15 min will not be sufficient because of the relatively slow rate of heat transfer through
the food into the can. Depending on the size of the can, effective time to achieve true
sterility may be several hours. During this time there can be many changes in the food
which reduce its quality. Fortunately, many foods need not be completely sterile to be
safe and have keeping quality.
5. CANNING AND BOTTLING
Canning process was first developed by Nicholas Appert in France in the year 1809.
Canning involves cooking fruits or vegetables, sealing them in sterile cans or jars, and
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boiling the containers to kill or weaken any remaining bacteria as a form of pasteurization.
Various foods have varying degrees of natural protection against spoilage and may
require that the final step occur in a pressure cooker. High-acid fruits like strawberries
require no preservatives to can and only a short boiling cycle, whereas marginal fruits
such as tomatoes require longer boiling and addition of other acidic elements. Many
vegetables require pressure canning. Food preserved by canning or bottling is at
immediate risk of spoilage once the can or bottle has been opened. Lack of quality control
in the canning process may allow ingress of water or micro-organisms. Most such failures
are rapidly detected as decomposition within the can causes gas production and the can
will swell or burst. However, there have been examples of poor manufacture and poor
hygiene allowing contamination of canned food by the obligate, Clostridium botulinum
which produces an acute toxin within the food leading to severe illness or death. This
organism produces no gas or obvious taste and remains undetected by taste or smell.
Food contaminated in this way has included Corned beef and Tuna.
6. DRYING
Drying is thermo-physical and physio-chemical operation by which the excess moisture
from a product is removed. It is defined as a process of moisture removal due to
simultaneous heat and mass transfer. Drying is the process of removal of moisture from
the agricultural product to a safe level for preservation of quality, quantity, nutritional
value and viability. It refers to removal of moisture from grains and other products to a
predetermined level, whereas dehydration means removal of moisture to very low levels
usually to bone dry condition. Drying makes the food grains and other product suitable
for safe storage and protects them against attack of insects, molds and other
microorganisms during storage.
Drying makes the food grains and other products suitable for safe
storage and protects them against attack of insects, molds and other micro-organisms
during storage During drying, the moisture from solid gets vaporized and diffused in dilute
environment. Removal of moisture takes place by high pressure or high temperature
conditions.
The main purpose of drying is to enhance storability and minimize packaging cost. The
quality of product and its cost are greatly influenced by the drying operation. The quality
of dried product is judged by the amount of physical and biochemical degradation which
occurs during dehydration process. The pretreatment, drying temperature, time and
moisture content influence the final product quality. Low temperatures generally have a
positive influence on the quality but require longer processing time. Low water activity
retards or eliminates the growth of microorganism and increase storability of food
products but result in higher lipid oxidation rates. Many fruits can be dried, for example,
the process is often applied to apples, pears, bananas, mangoes, papaya, apricot and
coconut. Zante currents, sultanas and raisins are all forms of dried grapes. Drying is also
the normal means of preservation for cereal grains such as wheat ,maize, oats ,barley,
rice, millet and rye.
DRYING METHODS:
The agricultural product drying methods can be broadly grouped into two,
(1) sun/solar drying,
(2) artificial drying with mechanical means.