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Nutritional improvement of plant foods by non-thermal processing.
Proc Nutr Soc. 2002 May; 61(2):311-8.PN

Abstract

As a result of the increasing consumer demand for minimally-processed fresh-like food products with high sensory and nutritional qualities, there is a growing interest in non-thermal processes for food processing and preservation. Key advanced technologies such as high-pressure processing, pulsed electric fields, dense gases and ultrasound are being applied to develop gentle but targeted processes to further improve the quality and safety of processed foods. These technologies also offer the potential for improving existing processes as well as for developing new process options. Furthermore, by adding new process dimensions (such as hydrostatic pressure, electric fields, ultrasonics, supercritical CO2) to the conventional process variables of temperature and time, they facilitate enlargement of the availability of unit operations. These operations might be applied effectively in unique combination processes, or as subsequent processing tools in more-targeted and subsequently less-intensive processes for food preservation and modification than the currently-applied processes.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Food Biotechnology and Food Process Engineering, Berlin University of Technology, Königin-Luise-Strasse 22, D-14195 Berlin, Germany. foodtech@mailszrz.zrz.tu-berlin.deNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12133214

Citation

Knorr, D, et al. "Nutritional Improvement of Plant Foods By Non-thermal Processing." The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, vol. 61, no. 2, 2002, pp. 311-8.
Knorr D, Ade-Omowaye BI, Heinz V. Nutritional improvement of plant foods by non-thermal processing. Proc Nutr Soc. 2002;61(2):311-8.
Knorr, D., Ade-Omowaye, B. I., & Heinz, V. (2002). Nutritional improvement of plant foods by non-thermal processing. The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 61(2), 311-8.
Knorr D, Ade-Omowaye BI, Heinz V. Nutritional Improvement of Plant Foods By Non-thermal Processing. Proc Nutr Soc. 2002;61(2):311-8. PubMed PMID: 12133214.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Nutritional improvement of plant foods by non-thermal processing. AU - Knorr,D, AU - Ade-Omowaye,B I O, AU - Heinz,V, PY - 2002/7/23/pubmed PY - 2002/11/26/medline PY - 2002/7/23/entrez SP - 311 EP - 8 JF - The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society JO - Proc Nutr Soc VL - 61 IS - 2 N2 - As a result of the increasing consumer demand for minimally-processed fresh-like food products with high sensory and nutritional qualities, there is a growing interest in non-thermal processes for food processing and preservation. Key advanced technologies such as high-pressure processing, pulsed electric fields, dense gases and ultrasound are being applied to develop gentle but targeted processes to further improve the quality and safety of processed foods. These technologies also offer the potential for improving existing processes as well as for developing new process options. Furthermore, by adding new process dimensions (such as hydrostatic pressure, electric fields, ultrasonics, supercritical CO2) to the conventional process variables of temperature and time, they facilitate enlargement of the availability of unit operations. These operations might be applied effectively in unique combination processes, or as subsequent processing tools in more-targeted and subsequently less-intensive processes for food preservation and modification than the currently-applied processes. SN - 0029-6651 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12133214/Nutritional_improvement_of_plant_foods_by_non_thermal_processing_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -