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Research Project: IMPROVED PROCESSES FOR CUCUMBERS, CABBAGE, SWEETPOTATOES, AND PEPPERS TO MAKE HIGH QUALITY, NUTRITIOUS PRODUCTS AND REDUCE POLLUTION

Location: Food Science Research

Title: Improvement of heating uniformity in packaged acidified vegetables pasteurized with a 915 MHz continuous microwave system

Authors
item Koskiniemi, Craig -
item Truong, Van-Den
item Simunovic, Josip -
item McFeeters, Roger

Submitted to: Journal of Food Engineering
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: February 9, 2011
Publication Date: March 24, 2011
Repository URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/50197
Citation: Koskiniemi, C.B., Truong, V.D., Simunovic, J., McFeeters, R.F. 2011. Improvement of heating uniformity in packaged acidified vegetables pasteurized with a 915 MHz continuous microwave system. Journal of Food Engineering. 105:149-160.

Interpretive Summary: Microwave technology has the potential to preserve foods with higher quality and with more efficient use of energy than conventional heating technologies. This occurs because food can be heated rapidly and because, with proper engineering, microwave systems convert a high percentage of the input energy into heat within the food itself. This research shows the distribution of heating in acidified vegetables covered with a brine solution in single serving plastic cups using a continuous flow commercial microwave heating unit. A method to improve the uniformity of microwave heating to quickly attain the required pasteurization temperature when the product contains up to 1% salt is demonstrated. This work provides an initial step toward the use of microwave technology to pasteurize acidified vegetables to make them shelf stable at room temperature.

Technical Abstract: Continuous microwave processing to produce shelf-stable acidified vegetables with moderate to high salt contents poses challenges in pasteurization due to reduced microwave penetration depths and non-uniform heating. Cups of sweetpotato, red bell pepper, and broccoli acidified to pH 3.8 with citric acid solution containing 0-1% NaCl were placed on a conveyor belt and passed through a microwave tunnel operating at 915 MHz and 4 kW with a 4 min residence time. The time-temperature profiles of vegetable pieces at 5 locations in the package were measured using fiber optic temperature sensors. Addition of 1% NaCl to the cover solution lowered microwave penetration into vegetable pieces and decreased the mean temperature in cups of acidified vegetables from 84 °C to 73 °C. Soaking blanched vegetables for 24 h in a solution with NaCl and citric acid prior to processing improved microwave heating. Heating was non-uniform in all packages with a cold spot of approximately 60 °C at a point in the container farthest from the incident microwaves. More uniform heating was achieved by implementation of a two-stage rotation apparatus to rotate vegetable cups 180° during processing. Rotating the cups resulted in more uniform heating and a temperature of 77 °C at the cold spot. This is above the industrial standard of 74 °C for in-pack pasteurization of acidified vegetables. The effective treatment involved blanching, soaking for 24 h in a NaCl and citric acid solution, and 180° rotation. This work has contributed to a better understanding of the influence of salt addition and distribution during dielectric heating of acidified vegetables using 915 MHz continuous microwave system.

   

 
Project Team
Truong, Van-Den
Perez Diaz, Ilenys
Johanningsmeier, Suzanne
Breidt, Frederick
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Quality and Utilization of Agricultural Products (306)
 
Related Projects
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   IMPROVED BREEDING AND VARIETY EVALUATION METHODS TO REDUCE ACRYLAMIDE CONTENT AND INCREASE QUALITY IN PROCESSED POTATO PRODUCTS
   PROCESS-READY CUCUMBER PRESERVATION BY ACIDIFICATION WITH LESS THAN 2.4% ACETIC ACID
   PROCESS-READY CUCUMBER PRESERVATION BY ACIDIFICATION WITH LESS THAN 2.4% ACETIC ACID
   Joint research and development of improved types of processed vegetable products by combining U.S. and Korean traditional technology
 
 
Last Modified: 05/24/2013
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