Heat Treatment: Effect on Microbiological Changes and Shelf Life

 

Authors
Tejedor, Wesley
Format
Article
Status
publishedVersion
Description

Foods are complex ecosystems constituted by the environment and the microorganisms that live in it. The food environment consists of intrinsic factors such as pH, water activity, and nutritional components and extrinsic factors such as temperature and gaseous composition, among others. By manipulating these, factors microbial growth can be limited and enzymatic degradation can be avoided, achieving the food preservation. Thermal treatment is one of the most important physical methods for increasing the shelf life of foods. It is a versatile and economical system that can be adapted to almost any foodstuff and package. It can also be combined with other physical or chemical stress factors to achieve the microbiological stability of foods, causing the least possible destruction of quality. Traditionally, foods have been sterilized in hermetically sealed tinplate cans or glass jars. The intensity of the heat treatment applied depends on the type of foodstuff, quality of raw materials employed, pH, transportation and storage conditions, and geographic retail area. If the treatment complies with ‘commercial sterilization’ standards and no recontamination is allowed, it is clear that foods preserved by sterilization are stable and safe from a microbiological point of view during their shelf life. To avoid recontamination, sterilization relies on the existence of a hermetic package and, in some cases, such as with aseptic packaging, on very strict additional hygiene measures.
Foods are complex ecosystems constituted by the environment and the microorganisms that live in it. The food environment consists of intrinsic factors such as pH, water activity, and nutritional components and extrinsic factors such as temperature and gaseous composition, among others. By manipulating these, factors microbial growth can be limited and enzymatic degradation can be avoided, achieving the food preservation. Thermal treatment is one of the most important physical methods for increasing the shelf life of foods. It is a versatile and economical system that can be adapted to almost any foodstuff and package. It can also be combined with other physical or chemical stress factors to achieve the microbiological stability of foods, causing the least possible destruction of quality. Traditionally, foods have been sterilized in hermetically sealed tinplate cans or glass jars. The intensity of the heat treatment applied depends on the type of foodstuff, quality of raw materials employed, pH, transportation and storage conditions, and geographic retail area. If the treatment complies with ‘commercial sterilization’ standards and no recontamination is allowed, it is clear that foods preserved by sterilization are stable and safe from a microbiological point of view during their shelf life. To avoid recontamination, sterilization relies on the existence of a hermetic package and, in some cases, such as with aseptic packaging, on very strict additional hygiene measures.

Publication Year
2016
Language
eng
Topic
Heat Treatment
Microbiological
Shelf Life
Heat Treatment
Microbiological
Shelf Life
Repository
RI de Documento Digitales de Acceso Abierto de la UTP
Get full text
http://ridda2.utp.ac.pa/handle/123456789/2930
Rights
openAccess
License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/