Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Food Preservation Methods

Food Preservation Methods

Food Preservation Methods

On this page

Principles & High Temp - Heat Heroes

  • Goals: ↑Safety, ↑Shelf-life.
  • Mechanisms: Inhibit/kill microbes, inactivate enzymes.

High Temperature Methods:

  • Pasteurization: Kills pathogens (Coxiella burnetii), ↓spoilage microbes.
    • LTLT: 63°C/30min.
    • HTST: 72°C/15s.
    • UHT: 135-150°C/1-2s.
    • 📌 Mnemonic: "Lazy Thirty, Hasty Seconds, Ultra Short".
  • Sterilization: Kills all viable microbes.
    • Commercial sterility (12D: $10^{12}$ reduction of C. botulinum spores).
  • Canning: Heat in sealed containers.
    • Spoilage: Flat sour, swells.
  • Blanching: Inactivates enzymes, ↓surface microbes.

Food preservation methods: heat vs non-thermal

⭐ UHT sterilization (e.g., 135°C for 2-5s) achieves commercial sterility, allowing long shelf-life at ambient temperatures.

Low Temp & Dehydration - Chill & Dry Spells

  • Low Temperature
    • Refrigeration: ~4°C; slows growth (psychrotrophs like Listeria can persist).
    • Freezing: -18°C or lower; stops growth, ice crystals damage microbes. Quick freezing is better.
  • Dehydration (Drying)
    • Principle: Reduces water activity ($a_w$), inhibiting microbes.
    • Min. $a_w$ for growth: Bacteria >0.90; Yeasts >0.85; Molds >0.70. (Preservation aims below these).
    • Methods:
      • Sun drying.
      • Osmotic dehydration (sugar/salt).
      • Freeze-drying (Lyophilization): Superior quality.

      ⭐ Lyophilization (freeze-drying) preserves food quality best by minimizing heat damage and structural changes. Commercial food dehydratoroka

Chemical Methods & Irradiation - Zap & Pickle Power

  • Chemical Preservatives:
    • Traditional: Salt, Sugar (osmotic effect); Acids (Vinegar, Lactic acid).
    • FSSAI Class I (natural); Class II (synthetic). Examples:
      • Benzoates (e.g., Sodium Benzoate), Sorbates (e.g., Potassium Sorbate).
      • Nitrites (meat curing, anti-C. botulinum, color fixation).
      • Sulfites (e.g., $SO_2$, anti-browning, antimicrobial).
  • Irradiation (Cold Sterilization):
    • Types: Gamma rays ($^{60}Co, ^{137}Cs$), X-rays, Electron beams.
    • Mechanism: DNA damage. Units: Gray (Gy), kGy.
    • Doses (📌 Mnemonic: Real Rad Apples - High to Low):
      • Radappertization (sterilization): >10 kGy.
      • Radicidation (pathogen reduction): ~2.5-10 kGy.
      • Radurization (spoilage delay): ~0.4-2.5 kGy.
    • Symbol: Radura. Radura symbol on irradiated strawberries

⭐ Nitrites in cured meats are crucial for preventing Clostridium botulinum spore germination and toxin production.

Biological & Modern Methods - Smart Shield Tech

  • Biological Methods:

    • Fermentation: Agents: Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB), yeasts, molds.
      • Products: Yogurt, pickles, idli.
      • Mechanisms: ↓pH (acids), alcohol, antimicrobials.
    • Bacteriocins: Natural antimicrobial peptides.
      • E.g., Nisin: From Lactococcus lactis, GRAS status, targets Gram-positives.

      ⭐ Nisin is a commercially used bacteriocin, effective against Gram-positive bacteria, including spore-formers like Clostridium and Bacillus.

  • Modern Methods:

    • Modified Atmosphere Packaging (MAP): Alters gas mix (↓$O_2$, ↑$CO_2$, $N_2$) for fresh produce, meats. Modified Atmosphere Packaging (MAP)
    • Controlled Atmosphere Storage (CAS): Precise gas control for bulk storage (e.g., fruits, vegetables).
    • Hurdle Technology: Combines sub-lethal stresses for synergistic preservation. 📌 Think "Multiple small hurdles are harder to jump!"
      • Example: low pH + low $a_w$ + mild heat + preservative.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Pasteurization (HTST, UHT) kills non-sporing pathogens; Coxiella burnetii is the indicator.
  • Canning (sterilization) eliminates all microbes, including Clostridium botulinum spores.
  • Irradiation (e.g., gamma rays) damages microbial DNA; used for spices, meat.
  • Chemical preservatives like nitrites prevent C. botulinum in cured meats; sorbates inhibit molds.
  • Low temperature (refrigeration/freezing) is microbiostatic, slowing growth.
  • Drying reduces water activity (aw), inhibiting microbial proliferation.
  • Modified Atmosphere Packaging (MAP) alters gas (↑CO₂, ↓O₂) to extend shelf life.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE