Yawen Lin , Jeyamkondan Subbiah , Long Chen , Tushar Verma , Yanhong Liu
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引用次数: 22
Abstract
This study validated the radio frequency assisted traditional thermal processing (RF assisted-TTP) for pasteurization of low-moisture foods. Powdered infant formula milk (PIFM) with water activity of 0.22 ± 0.01 was selected as a low-moisture food model. The cold spot during the RF heating of PIFM was found to be the center of top layer in a tray containing 312 g of PIFM. The PIFM was inoculated with Cronobacter sakazakii and 12 g inoculated sample packed in a plastic bag was placed at the pre-determined cold spot. The sample was treated until the cold spot reached 65 °C in a 6-kW, 27.12-MHz RF heating system and the sample tray was transferred to a hot air oven set at 65 °C for various holding times. Based on the microbial inactivation during holding time, D-value at 65 °C was determined. After 21 h oven holding, a 5-log reduction of C. sakazakii was achieved. The sample was also thermally treated in the same oven without any RF pre-heating. The quality analysis results indicated that both RF assisted-TTP and TTP had no significant effect on color, solubility, digestibility, and wettability, while significant changes were observed on water activity, moisture content, POV and TBArs after both treatments. Come-up time to heat up sample to 65 °C in RF system and oven was approximately 10 min and 5 h, respectively. RF assisted-TTP is more suitable for pasteurization of PIFM than TTP due to lower lipid oxidation and much shorter overall processing time. Thus, RF may provide a potential as an effective emerging technology for pasteurizing while maintaining the quality of PIFM.
期刊介绍:
Food Control is an international journal that provides essential information for those involved in food safety and process control.
Food Control covers the below areas that relate to food process control or to food safety of human foods:
• Microbial food safety and antimicrobial systems
• Mycotoxins
• Hazard analysis, HACCP and food safety objectives
• Risk assessment, including microbial and chemical hazards
• Quality assurance
• Good manufacturing practices
• Food process systems design and control
• Food Packaging technology and materials in contact with foods
• Rapid methods of analysis and detection, including sensor technology
• Codes of practice, legislation and international harmonization
• Consumer issues
• Education, training and research needs.
The scope of Food Control is comprehensive and includes original research papers, authoritative reviews, short communications, comment articles that report on new developments in food control, and position papers.