Essentials of Thermal Processing. Gary Tucker S.. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Gary Tucker S.
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Техническая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119470328
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1.2 Nicolas Appert, drawing on Commemorative Stamp issued by Monaco in 2010.

      In 1859, Louis Pasteur demonstrated the role of micro‐organisms in food spoilage. In his experiment, he heated broth in long swan necked jars to sterilize them. The jars either had filters on them, or very long necks that allowed only air, but not dust and other particles through. Nothing grew in the broths unless the flasks were broken open. He therefore correctly concluded that the living organisms that grew came from outside, as spores on dust, rather than spontaneously generated within the broth or from the air. He showed that the growth of micro‐organisms was responsible for spoiling products like beer, wine, and milk.

      Microbiology was in its infancy in the nineteenth century. Many people contributed to developing it into the science it is today. A few of these scientists who made significant contributions to the understanding of the science of canning are mentioned below (Goldblith 1972).

Photo depicts Louis Pasteur, painting by A. Edelfeldt (1885). Photo depicts Joseph Lister, painting by unknown.

      Robert Koch (1843–1910) isolated the Bacillus bacteria responsible for tuberculosis and the one for anthrax. He also isolated the bacteria responsible for cholera, Vibrio cholera. In his work with anthrax, he noticed that when the bacteria were exposed to unfavourable conditions, they went into a dormant state, forming internal spores that could survive for extended periods in the soil, causing outbreaks of the disease at opportune times. More of Koch's contributions to microbiology were in the areas of culturing bacteria and examining them. He developed solid culture media by adding gelatine and other solidifying agents to liquid media in order to obtain isolated growths of micro‐organisms. These isolated growths were called ‘colonies’ and were found to contain millions of individual micro‐organisms packed tightly together. He noted that the colonies were visible to the naked eye, whereas the individual cells were not. Koch also found that, by adding dyes to micro‐organisms smeared onto a glass slide, individual cells could be seen more clearly with a microscope.

      In about 1860, Isaac Solomon, a canner in Baltimore in the USA, added calcium chloride to the cooking water enabling it to ‘boil’ at 116 °C instead of 100 °C and thus drastically reducing the cooking times that had been in use.

      In 1895, Dr Harry L. Russell published a paper describing swelling spoilage in canned peas. He did experiments where he processed peas at higher temperatures and longer times and showed that the percent spoilage was significantly reduced.

Photo depicts underwood and Prescott.

      Courtesy of the MIT Museum.

      There are many excellent scientists who have contributed invaluable insight into the field of thermal processing, but most of the foundation work was done by those mentioned above.

      The early bacteriological studies on spore death kinetics were done by different researchers at various temperatures. This work was done between 1921 and 1948. As could be expected, the lower the temperature, the slower the rate of kill. Stumbo took this information and calculated the z‐value of 18 °F (10 °C) and an F‐value of 2.78 minutes for Clostridium botulinum spores on a thermal death time curve that passed through 250 °F (121.1 °C) at 2.78 minutes (Tucker 2008). This temperature was appropriate for practical cooking times as well as being safely achievable in the processing vessels of the day. This was the basis of the Fo3, at 250 °F concept which is still applicable today.

      The General Method for calculating scheduled process times was originally described by Bigelow et al in 1920, but contributions by Ball in 1928 and O.T Schulz and F. C. W. Olson in 1940 resulted in a much improved General Method. M. Patashnik published his improvements which are the most widely used today in 1953 (Patashnik 1953; Park 1996).

      The invention of a standardized reliable thermocouple probe for measurement of real time heat penetration temperatures was an important contribution made by Ecklund (1949).

      J.R. Manson, A.A. Teixeira, and K. Purohit were three of Stumbo's graduate students who also contributed significantly to the field of thermal processing. They were engineers, and the first to apply engineering mathematics to simulate the coupling of heat transfer with thermal inactivation kinetics in thermal processing of canned foods. Teixeira used this approach to find optimum retort the time and temperature combinations that would maximize quality retention while delivering specified target lethality. Manson carried Teixeira's work further by improving the mathematical model to simulate convection as well as conduction heat transfer.