Course:FNH200/Lessons/Lesson 07

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Preservation of Foods by Low Temperature

7.0 Overview

In this lesson you will learn about the principles that form the basis for extending the storage life of foods through the use of low temperatures above and below the freezing point of water. You will also learn about chilled storage of perishable foods and the use of modified and controlled atmospheres to extend the storage life of foods.

You will learn about the importance of freezing and thawing rates and their influence on the quality of frozen foods. The importance of ice crystal size and chemical reactions and physical changes that can occur in foods during freezing, frozen storage and thawing will be briefly discussed. You will learn about some of the methods of freezing foods and also about packaging requirements for foods held in chilled and frozen storage.

Objectives

Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • explain the principles that form the basis of extension of storage life of foods at low temperatures;
  • outline the importance of freezing rates, temperature stability during storage of frozen foods, and thawing rates on quality maintenance in frozen foods
  • describe the factors that can affect quality of foods during frozen storage

Required Videos

  • Corn processing and Ice cream production

The links for these videos will be indicated later in the lesson.

7.1 Use of Low Temperatures in Food Preservation

Terms to remember

  • Psychrotrophic
  • Modified atmosphere packaging (MAP)
  • Freezing point
  • Latent heat
  • Concentration effects
  • Freezer burn
  • Freezing rate
  • IQF(individually quick frozen)
  • Indirect contact freezers
  • Cryogenic
  • water vapour

Refrigeration or cool storage generally refers to storage at temperatures above freezing, while freezing and frozen storage occur at temperatures below freezing. However, whereas pure water freezes at 0°C, most foods do not begin to freeze until a temperature of -2°C or lower is reached.

Refrigerated or cool storage generally will preserve most perishable foods for days or weeks, while good frozen storage conditions with proper packaging can preserve foods for months or even years.

It should be noted that some psychrotrophic pathogens (review terminology in Lesson 5) can grow, although slowly, at refrigerator temperatures, and some spoilage organisms can even grow at temperatures below 0°C providing that there is unfrozen water available.

Below -9.5°C, there is no significant growth of spoilage or pathogenic organisms, and there is a gradual decrease in numbers of living organisms. However, freezing and frozen storage do not lead to complete destruction, and rapid growth and multiplication can occur during thawing.

7.2 Refrigeration (Cool Storage) of Foods

Refrigeration is one of the mildest approaches to food preservation.

  • Refrigeration/Cool storage of foods falls between -2°C to 16°C. However, in the food industry, the refrigeration temperatures should be in the range of 4°C and below. The Food and Drug Regulations of Canada state that perishable foods that can support the growth of disease-causing microorganisms must be stored at temperatures of 4°C and below.
  • A drop of 10°C slows down rate of senescence by 2 to 3 times and microbial growth by 3 to 6 times.
  • Refrigeration temperatures inhibit the growth of most disease-causing microorganisms but can favour the psychrotrophic microorganisms.
  • Some spoilage-causing microorganisms, particularly moulds, can grow at temperatures as low as -8°C.
  • You must keep in mind that refrigeration storage temperatures only provides a short term extension to the storage life of foods
  • Refrigeration storage of foods can not improve the quality of a food item that is low of quality when placed into cold storage.

In addition to being a mild approach to short-term preservation, refrigeration is also sometimes applied to achieve desirable attributes of fermented food products such as cheeses, beef and wine upon cool ripening or aging.

What are the optimal conditions for refrigerated storage of foods?

Each food commodity has its optimum refrigeration conditions for maximum storage life and retention of quality and nutritional value.

The storage life of meats, fish and dairy products are maximized by temperatures that approach 0°C. During refrigerated storage of foods, maintenance of controlled temperatures are very important to ensure maximum storage life of the foods and to prevent chill injury to certain foods, especially some fruits and vegetables. For example, as reported by Potter and Hotchkiss (1995):

  • Bananas will undergo a colour change in the peel from yellow to black, while sweet potatoes may show decay, pitting and internal discolorations, when stored at temperatures below 13°C.
  • Apples may become soggy or show internal browning if stored below 1-2°C.
  • Potatoes and avocados may also become brown if stored below 5 and 7°C, respectively.

Other factors to be controlled for products in refrigerated storage are humidity and gas atmosphere composition. A very fine humidity balance must be maintained to prevent dehydration of the food while avoiding creation of conditions that are so humid that mould growth and food spoilage are favoured. Many food products are stored under controlled and modified atmospheres in conjunction with refrigerated storage for the extension of storage life.

A controlled atmosphere refers to a condition in which the atmosphere surrounding a food product is different from that of the normal atmosphere, and the composition of the atmosphere around the product is constantly monitored and maintained at preset levels.

Review from Lesson 1: "controlled atmosphere storage"- facilities where the atmosphere (CO2, O2 and N2) and humidity are carefully controlled and temperature kept low to slow the rate of respiration and ripening of the apples, thus extending the storage life of the fresh fruit.

Modified atmosphere refers to the creation of atmospheric conditions around the product that are different from the normal atmosphere. In this type of system, food items are placed into a package. The air in the package is then removed either by drawing a vacuum, then backflushing the package with the desired gas mixture before sealing the package, or simply by flushing the package with the desired gas mixture until the air in the package is replaced by the desired gas mixture (usually a combination ofcarbon dioxide and nitrogen) before sealing the package. Examples of products with MA-packaging (MAP) are shown in Figure 7.1.

FNH200 Lesson07 MAPLettuce.jpg
Figure 7.1 Examples of modified packaging packaging (MAP).

The composition of the atmosphere in a modified atmosphere packed food product changes over time, the changes being governed by metabolic activities of the food, the microorganisms in the food, and the gas permeability of the packaging materials used.

Vacuum packaged processed or cured meats are another example of MAP, except in this case once the vacuum is applied the product is packaged, there is no backflushing with a gas mixture prior to sealing the package. These products have a much longer storage life than those stored in air. Removal of oxygen from these products through the vacuum process suppresses the growth of the aerobic spoilage-causing bacteria. This leads to the extension of the storage life of these products.

  • Retail cuts of cheese are often packed under vacuum or under gas mixtures to prevent the growth of moulds which are common aerobic spoilage-causing microorganisms of cheeses.

Keep in mind the fact that although food products packed under modified atmospheres have a longer storage life, those products must be kept in refrigerated storage in order to maximize the benefits of inhibition of growth of spoilage-causing microorganisms and to prevent the growth of microorganisms that may be capable of causing illness.

Want to learn more?
  • Compare and contrast controlled atmosphere storage and modified atmosphere packaging.

Changes in Food During Refrigerated Storage

Over prolonged storage, numerous aundesirable changes can be observed, in addition to those brought on by microbial spoilage. These include:

  • staling of bread
  • loss of crispness in fruits and vegetables
  • change in colour of fresh meat
  • loss of flavour and nutrient value (e.g. vitamins)
  • oxidative changes
  • drip or syneresis from fish

7.3 Freezing and Frozen Storage of Foods

Freezing provides longer shelf life of food. It is carried out at temperatures well below 0°C. In fact, commercial freezing requires a minimum of -18°C. Household freezers only reach temperatures of -12 to -14°C

The basis for preservation by freezing/frozen storage is that freezing permits longer term storage than refrigerated storage due to:

  1. lower temperatures used (remember that microorganisms can not grow well at temperatures below -9.5°C)
  2. lower water activity (by freezing the "free" water present in the food)

Both factors slow down chemical and enzymatic reactions as well as microbial growth.

  • Keep in mind that physical, chemical & enzymatic changes may still take place, especially if freezing and frozen storage conditions are not optimal.
  • Freezing slows/stops microbial growth. However, storage of food at freezing temperatures does not kill all microorganisms and in fact many disease-causing and spoilage-causing microorganisms can survive in frozen foods for many years (e.g. Listeria monocytogenes). Once the food is thawed, the surviving microorganisms can resume their growth and function, causing disease or spoilage if the proper conditions for microbial growth prevail.
  • When freezing of food is properly done, it can preserve the quality of the food without causing major changes in appearance, texture and flavour.
  • Frozen foods are generally of higher nutritional and aesthetic quality than thermally processed foods. The faster the rate of freezing, the better the retention of quality, both from sensory and nutritional perspectives. The effect of freezing and other preservation methods on nutrient quality will be discussed later in the course (Lesson 11).
  • Whether food is frozen in your home or in a food processing plant, the same principles govern the maintenance of quality during freezing and frozen storage.

What does "freezing point" mean?

Freezing point is the temperature at which ice crystals are in equilibrium with air-saturated water at 1 atmosphere pressure. Solutes in water will depress the freezing point.

What is the freezing point of pure water? ...of water in foods?

Although the freezing point of pure water is 0oC, actually water does not begin to freeze until it is supercooled to several degrees below 0oC.

The freezing point of foods is below the freezing point of pure water, because foods contain solutes dissolved in the aqueous (water) phase. The dissolved solutes have the net effect of lowering the freezing point of foods by several degrees Celsius.

Once water starts to crystallize, there is an abrupt rise in temperature due to the evolution of the latent heat of fusion or crystallization. Only after all the water has frozen (crystallized) will the temperature approach the temperature of the freezing environment.

Note that water is frozen out as pure water. Until all of the water is frozen, there is an ever-increasing concentration of water-soluble solutes in the unfrozen phase. In fact, there is a considerable proportion of unfrozen water at temperatures below 0 C.

How much water remains unfrozen?

This depends both on the temperature as well as the food product itself. For example, for beef, 70% of the water remains in the unfrozen state at -4.0 oC, compared to 3% and only trace amounts at -9.0 and -18oC, respectively.

From this description you will begin to appreciate that many complex changes occur within food systems as the freezing operation is carried out.

Freezing and thawing curves are shown below in Figure 7.1. This figure describes the transitions that take place in a hypothetical food material during freezing and thawing, including:

  • removal of heat from the product (sensible heat)
  • freezing of water (liquid) into ice crystals (solid) (latent heat of fusion or crystallization)
  • further cooling to the surrounding temperature
L7 fig7-1.png
L7 fig7-1b - FNH200.gif

Changes in Food During Freezing, Frozen Storage and Thawing

You may have had the unfortunate experience of placing a beverage or other container of liquid food in a freezer to chill it quickly, only to find the container has cracked or the lid popped off because of the expansion of the water in the food as the water froze. The same phenomenon occurs within the cells of food during freezing if the conditions are not carefully controlled.

Rupture of cell walls and membranes during freezing and thawing can lead to formation of drip when the product is thawed. The process of freezing foods has great influence on the ultimate quality of the food once it is thawed and prepared for consumption. Changes that occur in foods during freezing, storage and thawing can be both chemical and physical in nature.

Various chemical, enzymatic and physical changes are promoted as a result of the concentration of components (concentration effects) in the unfrozen water phase within the frozen foods.

For example:

  • Chemical changes such as oxidative rancidity or oxidation of flavour components, pigments and vitamins.
  • Enzymatic reactions such as enzymatic browning or lipolytic rancidity.
  • Meats become tougher due to protein denaturation by chemical effects and cell breakage by ice crystals

In freezing foods, the objective is to promote the formation of tiny ice crystals rather than the formation of fewer but larger ice crystals that cause cellular damage. Ice crystal damage can lead to loss of water from the food product once it is thawed.

  • The drip that is found in thawed strawberries or beef is due in part to ice crystal damage to the cells, leading to leakage of cellular fluids into extracellular spaces, and to the loss of water-holding capacity of food components as a result of concentration effects.
  • Emulsions and other dispersions are destabilized by the growth of numerous small ice crystals to larger, less numerous but more damaging ice crystals; such growth in ice crystal size is usually caused by temperature fluctuations.
  • You may have noted shrinkage and development of graininess in ice cream stored in the frost-free freezer section of your refrigerator. This is due to partial melting of the ice cream during temperature fluctuations that result from the defrost cycles. This leads to foam destabilization and crystallization of lactose as a consequence of concentration effects.

Other undesirable changes include formation of package ice and freeze dehydration which is popularly called freezer burn and can produce unsightly food surfaces and loss of nutrients. "Freezer burn" is a misnomer since the food does not "burn" in the freezer but rather takes on an appearance of having been burnt because of the moisture loss that occurs during this freeze dehydration.

How can we minimize Changes in Food During Freezing, Frozen Storage and Thawing?

  • Blanching (lesson 6)
  • Proper temperature control for freezing and frozen storage
  • Appropriate packaging (discussed later in this lesson)

Factors affecting the quality of frozen foods

The type and extent of changes during freezing, frozen storage and thawing, which are directly related to the final quality of frozen foods, are affected by many factors. Here are the 4 most common ones:

  • rate of freezing
  • final storage temperature
  • stability of storage temperature, and
  • rate of thawing

Rate of freezing (freezing rate)

The rate of freezing of foods is very important, with rapid freezing rates being desirable since the formation of many small ice crystals is favoured. Freezing rates vary depending on:

  1. Food composition: Some food components such as proteins and fats act as insulators. Presence of these components slow down the freezing.
  2. Temperature difference: the greater the temperature difference between the food and the refrigerant, the faster the freezing rate.
  3. Product thickness/geometry and heat transfer rate: the thinner the food piece or greater the heat transfer rate, the faster the freezing rate.
  4. Air velocity: the greater the velocity of refrigerated air or circulating refrigerant, the faster the freezing rate.
  5. Degree of contact: the more contact between the food and the cooling medium, the faster the freezing rate.

These five factors are given great attention in the design of food freezing plants in order to maximize the rate of freezing so that quality attributes of the food commodity can be retained.

Final storage temperature

The final temperature for storage of frozen foods is dictated by a number of factors: texture changes, chemical reactions, etc. There are a number of reasons why the storage temperature of about -18°C is commonly used and the normal operating temperature of deep freezers sold for home use is also -18°C.

Table 7.1 shows the number of months during which high quality storage life of frozen food can be maintained at three different storage temperatures. Note how temperature has a marked influence on the storage life of frozen foods. You can see in Table 7.1 that each food commodity has its optimum storage life at -18°C. The rates of deterioration of frozen foods are governed by the chemical composition and physical structure of the foods.

Table 7.1. Approximate number of months of high quality storage1.

Stability of the storage temperature

As important as the storage temperature is the stability of the storage temperature. It is important to note that as the temperature of the frozen food increases, the amount of unfrozen water increases. Thus small fluctuations in storage temperature can cause melting of small ice crystals with subsequent refreezing of the liquid water on to other small ice crystals as the temperature drops, leading to the formation of fewer but larger ice crystals which can produce negative changes in the food quality.

Want to learn more?
  • Garden peas and corn kernels are frozen individually at the vegetable processing plant. When the package is picked-up the contents should feel like a bag of marbles. However, often when we purchase frozen peas in the retail store, those peas/corn are presented as a solid block.
  • Why does this change in physical appearance occur?
  • Response: The intermittent thawing and refreezing that takes place in the freezer display cabinets that are commonly used in retail stores are the main cause. As the peas partially defrost, the layer of water on the outside of each pea melts and as the temperature of peas then decreases again, the melted layer of water on adjoining peas freezes, thus causing the peas to stick together. One way of telling whether frozen foods such as garden peas have been handled properly throughout the distribution and retail chains is to determine whether the peas are frozen together in a large mass. If they are, temperature abuse has occurred at some point in the handling systems.

The rate of thawing

The rate of thawing of frozen foods is as critical to quality maintenance as the rate of freezing. Maximum quality retention is achieved by rapid thawing rates. Figure 7.1 shows a thawing curve for a hypothetical food product. Since ice is a good conductor of heat (it has a high thermal diffusivity) the temperature of a frozen food rapidly approaches the melting point of ice. After the rapid initial temperature increase, subsequent increases in temperature occur very slowly because of the need to supply the latent heat of fusion1 for the conversion of water from the crystalline state to the liquid state at 0°C.

1Latent heat is the quantity of heat required to change the state or condition under which a substance exists, without changing its temperature.

Want to learn more?
  • What is the impact of a long thawing period on the quality of the food?
  • How should you thaw frozen foods?
  • Why should you NOT re-freeze food after it has been thawed

Freezing Methods

The three basic methods of freezing foods are presented below.

Table 7.2. Commercial freezing methods.

Air Freezing Indirect Contact Freezing Immersion & Cryogenic Freezing
Still-air "sharp" freezer

Air blast freezer

Fluidized-bed freezer (IQF)

Single plate

Double plate

Pressure plate

Slush freezer

Heat Exchange fluid

Compressed gas

Refrigerant spray

Adapted from: Potter, N.N. and Hotchkiss, J.H. 1995. Cold Preservation and Processing (Ch. 9). In Food Science, 5th ed. Chapman and Hall, New York, NY. p.187

Air Freezing

Air freezing is the oldest and most common type of freezing used. The freezer section of your household refrigerator and the deep freezer are examples of still air freezers or low air velocity systems

Air blast freezing

Air blast freezing is a moderately fast freeze because of vigorous circulation of cold air. The product is placed on trays or mesh belts and passed slowly through an insulated tunnel. In different systems the temperature may range from -18°C to -34°C, with an air velocity of 100-3500 lineal feet per minute, with a counter current air flow.

Air blast freezers operate at lower temperatures than still air freezers and rely on movement of the cold air at high velocity over the food in order to achieve rapid removal of heat and to maximize the freezing rate.

Garden peas and individually quick frozen shrimp or prawns are frozen in fluidized-bed freezers. In this type of air freezing, solid particles ranging in size from peas to strawberries are being exposed through a movement of the cold air (-20 to -34°C) at high velocity as they pass along a conveyor belt. This will impart a vibratory motionto food particles, accelerating the freezing rate. The cold air being forced upward through the bed lifts and suspends the food particles, thus fluidization occurs. In this way, a rapid freezing rate is accomplished and an IQF (individually quick frozen) product is produced. In other words, food items are frozen as individual pieces and are not stuck together.

The garden peas, corn and other IQF products are packaged after freezing. If garden peas, or any other food product that is stated to be IQF on the package label, are present in the package as a solid block, this indicates that the product has undergone partial thawing and refreezing during storage, distribution, retailing, or on the way home from the retail store to your home.

Figure 7.2 illustrates the process of "fluidized bed freezing" used for some products.

Figure 7.2. Fluidized-bed Freezer

Video (on canvas)

Corn Processing

Please watch the video on Corn processing. Note the following:

  • How are the kernels separated from the cobs?
  • Why is corn starch added in the "froth flotation washer"?
  • What is the purpose of blanching? what temperature/time is used?
  • What is the "IQF" process and what temperature is used for freezing?
  • How long can corn be stored in a frozen state?

Indirect contact freezers

Indirect Contact freezers are used in the production of various frozen food commodities. In these freezers, food is placed on belts or trays and a refrigerant circulates through a wall beside the food. As the food comes into "contact" with the cold wall, it quickly cools down and freezes. Plate and slush freezers are some examples of indirect contact freezers.

During plate freezing food products are placed in contact with a metal surface which is cooled by a cold brine, or a vaporizer refrigerant such as ammonia. The packaged food either rests on, slides against or is pressed between the cold metal plates. These plates maintain firm contact with two major surfaces of packages to facilitate heat transfer and prevent bulging of the packages during the freezing process. Fish sticks and frozen fish fillets are commonly frozen in plate contact freezers (Figure 7.3).

Figure 7.3 Plate Freezer



Another type of indirect contact freezer is the slush freezers or scraped surface heat exchangers. These freezers can be used only for fluid food products. A common example of a scraped surface freezer is the machine used to convert ice cream mix to soft ice cream in restaurants and ice cream shops. The same principle is used in the commercial production of ice cream that is sold as hard ice cream. In the case of ice cream, the rotator not only aids in promoting rapid freezing and the development of small ice crystals, but it also aids in the incorporation of air bubbles into the freezing mix which results in the formation of a solid foam (review definition of a solid foam from Lesson 2).

As mentioned before, shrinkage and development of graininess in ice cream stored in the frost-free freezer section of your refrigerator is due to partial melting of the ice cream during temperature fluctuations that result from the defrost cycles. This leads to foam destabilization and crystallization of lactose as a consequence of concentration effects.

Video (on canvas)

Ice Cream Processing Video

Please watch the video on Ice cream production. Note the following:

  • Main steps followed in the production of ice cream
  • What type of freezer(s) are used?
  • What tests are conducted to assure safety and quality?

Immersion and Cryogenic freezing

Immersion freezing involves the immersion of packaged or un-packaged food products directly in a non-toxic refrigerant fluid. The refrigerant fluids commonly used are propylene glycol, glycerol, sodium chloride, calcium chloride, and mixtures of salt and sugar. Canned citrus juice, turkeys and chickens are often frozen in immersion freezing units. Ice cream popsicles can also be frozen using this method.

Cryogenic freezing is accomplished with cryogenic liquids, with liquid nitrogen being the most commonly used. This is a very rapid freezing method in which un-packaged or thinly packaged foods are exposed to extremely cold freezant. In contrast to the liquid immersion freezing, heat removal is accomplished during a change of state by the freezant. Products such as TV dinners, preformed hamburger patties and other high value food products are frozen in cryogenic freezers because of the excellent retention of quality imparted by the rapid rate of freezing and small ice crystal formation. Figure 7.4 illustrates a cryogenic process.

Figure 7.4 Cryogenic Freezing

How does liquid nitrogen cryogenic freezing work?

The product is first placed on a conveyor belt and is moved into the pre-cooling part of the freezing unit. Once the food is cooled, the food is sprayed by liquid nitrogen as it is being moved through the conveyor belt; here is where the freezing process takes place, by the nitrogen boiling as it contacts the food. Finally, the food is allowed to equilibrate to the desired final temperature (between -18°C to -30°C).

The following table gives a summary of some of the advantages and disadvantages of the freezing methods we have discussed:

Table 7.3. Some advantages and disadvantages of freezing methods.

Freezing method Advantages Disadvantages
Air blast freezing; Fluidize-bed freezing (IQF)
  • Economical
  • Can freeze various sizes and shapes of food
  • IQF has more efficient heat transfer, increased rate of freezing
  • Possible excess dehydration (freezer burn)
  • Undesirable bulging of the packages (by expansion of the product) may occur
  • Non-uniform products can not be fluidized (IQF) easily
Indirect Contact Freezing
  • Economical
  • Minimal dehydration
  • Minimal package bulging
  • Slow freezing process
  • Products must be of uniform thickness
Immersion/ Cryogenic freezing
  • Rapid freezing process
  • Almost no dehydration
  • Oxygen is excluded, decreasing oxidative spoilage
  • Individual freezing pieces have less freezing damage
  • Difficult to find suitable freezants
  • Cost of operating is high
Want to learn more?
  • Can you think about examples of foods that are processed using the three categories for freezing - i.e. in air, indirect contact, and immersion/cryogenic?

Packaging Considerations for Frozen Foods
Packaging materials to be used for frozen foods must be resistant to the transfer of water vapour from the food to the dry environment within the freezing unit. The packaging material must not shatter in the cold temperatures encountered in frozen storage. Therefore glass is not a good material for packaging frozen foods because it tends to shatter and it is not flexible. The packaging material should resist the formation of pinholes during normal handling.

Breaches in the packaging material will promote the development of freezer burn on the exposed areas of the food. Depending on the food, the packaging material may have to possess barrier properties toward light and/or oxygen.

Want to learn more?
  • After completing this lesson can you answer the following:
    • how long can foods be kept in the refrigerator? in the freezer?
    • can microorganisms grow/survive under these conditions?
    • how can we maximize the quality of refrigerated or frozen foods?
    • what other approach(es) can be used in combination with low temperature to maximize shelf life and quality?

7.4 Summary of Lesson 7

  • Low temperature processing and its packaging materials are designed to extend the food's shelf life by slowing down microbial growth and chemical/enzymatic reactions.
  • Microbial growth and chemical/enzymatic reactions will resume once the food is thawed or exposed to "warmer" temperatures.
  • Refrigeration (cool storage) refers to temperatures between -2°C to16°C . In particular at 4°C. This provides only a short term shelf-life extension in food as psychrotrophic organisms can still grow.
  • During refrigeration, the temperature, humidity and gas atmosphere composition must be monitored in order to prevent undesirable changes in the food.
  • Modified atmosphere packaging (MAP) is commonly used with some refrigerated products to enhance the shelf life of the product.
  • Below -9.5°C, there is no significant growth of spoilage or pathogenic organisms
  • Freezing refers to temperatures below the freezing point of water. In the food industry, a minimum of -18°C is required. Food is preserved by the use of lower temperatures and lower water activity.
  • During freezing, several factors (e.g. freezing rate, final storage temperature, etc) must be controlled in order to prevent undesirable changes (oxidation reactions, freezer burn, ice crystal damage, etc)
  • Packaging materials should assist in preventing these undesirable changes.

Supplemental Videos:

  1. Individually Quick Freeze (IQF) of sardines
  2. How to Make Frozen Treats

Reference

Potter, N. N. and J.H. Hotchkiss. 1998. Cold Preservation and Processing. Chapter 9 in Food Science, 5th ed. Chapman and Hall, New York, NY.


Authorship:

FNH 200 Course content on this wiki page and associated lesson pages was originally authored by Drs. Brent Skura, Andrea Liceaga, and Eunice Li-Chan. Ongoing edits and updates are contributed by past and current instructors including Drs. Andrea Liceaga, Azita Madadi-Noei, Nooshin Alizadeh-Pasdar, and Judy Chan.

Some rights reserved
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document according to the terms in Creative Commons License, Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0. The full text of this license may be found here: CC by-nc-sa 3.0
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1. Syneresis leads to the following change(s) in refrigerated foods:

Staling of bread
Loss of crispness and flavour in fruits and vegetable
Colour change in fresh meat
Loss of nutrients
Drip loss in fish


2. Which package material below is NOT suitable for frozen products?

Cardbox
Foil film
Glass bottle
Plastic film
Tetra pak


3. A slush freezer is an example of

Air Freezing
Indirect Contact Freezing
Immersion Freezing
Cryogenic Freezing


4. Psychrotrophic organisms can grow while food is stored in the refrigerator.

TRUE.
FALSE.


5. Under freezing conditions, chemical reactions can still occur.

TRUE.
FALSE.