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. Many consumers rely on packaged and processed foods for convenience and speedLose control over what foods containFood processing involves trade-offsMakes food safer, or gives food a longer useable lifetime, or cuts preparation timeAt cost of some vitamin and mineral losses. . Most forms of processing aim to extend the usable life of a foodTo preserve a food, a process must prevent three kinds of eventsMicrobial growthOxidative changesEnzymatic destruction.
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1. Effects of Food Processing on the Nutrients in Foods
2. Many consumers rely on packaged and processed foods for convenience and speed
Lose control over what foods contain
Food processing involves trade-offs
Makes food safer, or gives food a longer useable lifetime, or cuts preparation time
At cost of some vitamin and mineral losses
3. Most forms of processing aim to extend the usable life of a food
To preserve a food, a process must prevent three kinds of events
Microbial growth
Oxidative changes
Enzymatic destruction
4. Canning A method of preserving food by killing all microorganisms present in the food and then sealing out air
The food, container, and lid are heated until sterile
As the food cools, the lid makes an airtight seal, preventing contamination
5. Do Canned FoodsLose Nutrients? Fat-soluble vitamins and most minerals are relatively stable
Not affected much by canning
Three vulnerable water-soluble vitamins
Thiamin
Riboflavin
Vitamin C
6. Do Canned FoodsLose Nutrients? Some minerals are added when foods are canned
Important in this respect is sodium chloride, salt, which is added for flavoring
7. Freezing A method of preserving food by lowering the food’s temperature to a point that halts life processes
Microorganisms do not die but remain dormant until the food is thawed
Dramatically slows enzymatic reactions
8. Freezing Frozen foods may have a nutrient advantage over fresh
Fresh foods are often harvested unripe
Frozen foods are first allowed to ripen in the field
Allows the food to develop nutrients to their fullest potential
9. Drying A method of preserving food by removing sufficient water from the food to inhibit microbial growth
Eliminates microbial spoilage
Microbes need water to grow
Reduces the weight and volume of foods
Foods are mostly water
10. Drying Commercial drying does not cause major nutrient losses
Foods dried in heated oven at home may sustain dramatic nutrient losses
Vacuum puff drying and freeze drying
Take place at cold temperatures
Conserve nutrients especially well
11. Extrusion A process by which the form of a food is changed
Such as changing corn to corn chips
Not a preservation measure
In this process, the food is heated, ground, and pushed through various kinds of screens to yield different shapes
12. Results in considerable nutrient losses
Nutrients are usually added to compensate
Foods this far removed from the original state are still lacking significant nutrients (notably vitamin E) and fiber
13. Food Additives Substances that are added to foods but are normally not consumed by themselves as foods
14. Food Additives Compared with unregulated and untested “dietary supplements” sold directly to consumers, the 3,000 food additives in the U.S. are strictly controlled and pose little cause for concern
15. Manufacturers use food additives to give foods desirable characteristics
Color
Flavor
Texture
Stability
Enhanced nutrient composition
Resistance to spoilage
16. Regulations Governing Additives The FDA has the responsibility for deciding what additives shall be in foods
To obtain permission to use a new additive in food products, a manufacturer must test the additive and satisfy the FDA that
It is effective
It can be detected and measured in the final food product
It Is safe for consumption
17. The GRAS List Many substances were exempted from complying with the FDA procedure when it was first instituted because they had been used for a long time and their use entailed no known hazards
Some 700 substances were all put on the generally recognized as safe (GRAS) list
18. Additives must not be used In quantities larger than those necessary to achieve the needed effects
To disguise faulty or inferior products
To deceive the consumer
Where they significantly destroy nutrients
Where their effects can be achieved by economical, sound manufacturing processes
19. Antimicrobial Agents Preservatives that protect food from the growth of microbes that can spoil the food and cause foodborne illnesses
20. Antimicrobial Agents Salt and Sugar
The best-known and most widely used antimicrobial substances
Salt is used to preserve meat and fish
Sugar preserves jams, jellies, ad canned and frozen fruits
Both work by withdrawing water from the food
Microbes cannot grow without water
21. Antimicrobial Agents Nitrites
Added to meats and meat products to
Preserve their color
Enhance their flavor
Protect against bacterial growth
22. How Do AntioxidantsProtect Food? Food can go bad when it undergoes changes in color and flavor caused by exposure to oxygen in the air (oxidation)
Often these changes involve little hazard to health
But they damage the food’s appearance, taste, and nutritional quality
Antioxidant preservatives protect food from this kind of spoilage
23. Examples of common antioxidant additives
Vitamin C
Vitamin E (tocopherol)
Sulfites
BHA and BHT
24. Sulfites
Prevent oxidation in many processed foods, alcoholic beverages, and drugs
Were used to keep raw fruits and vegetables in salad bars looking fresh
Practice was banned after a few people experienced dangerous allergic reactions to the sulfites
FDA now prohibits sulfite use on food meant to be eaten raw
With the exception of grapes
25. BHA and BHT
Prevent rancidity in baked goods and snack foods
26. Artificial Colors Only about 10 of an original 80 synthetic color additives are still on the GRAS list
Among the most intensively investigated of all additives, artificial colors are much better known than the natural pigments of plants
27. Food colorants only make foods pretty
Other additives, such as preservatives, make foods safe
With food colors we can afford to require that their use entail no risk
With other food additives, we must weigh the risks of using them against the risks of not using them
28. Close to 2,000 artificial flavors and enhancers are approved
Safety evaluation of flavoring agents is problematic because so many are already in use
The flavors are strong and are used in tiny amounts unlikely to impose risks
And they occur naturally in a wide variety of foods
29. Incidental Food Additives Are really contaminants from some phase of production, processing, packaging, or consumer preparation
Include tiny bits of plastic, glass, paper, tin and the like from packages and chemicals from processing, such as solvents used to decaffeinate some coffees
30. Nutrient Additives Include
Enrichment nutrients added to refined grains
Iodine added to salt
Vitamins A and D added to dairy products
Nutrients used to fortify breakfast cereals
31. REMEMBER…
The more heavily processed foods are the less nutritious they become