Food Preservation
Food preservation in the broad sense of the
term refers to all measures taken against any spoilage of food. In its narrower
sense, however, food preservation connotes processes directed against food
spoilage due to microbial or biochemical action. Preservation technologies are
based mainly on the inactivation of microorganisms or on the delay or
prevention of microbial growth. Consequently they must operate through those
factors that most effectively influence the survival and growth of
microorganisms (ICMSF, 1980). Factors
used for food preservation are called ‘hurdles’ and there are numerous hurdles
that have been applied for food preservation. Potential hurdles for use in the preservation
of foods can be divided into physical, physicochemical, microbially derived and
miscellaneous hurdles (Leistner and Gorris, 1995). Among these hurdles, the
most important have been used for centuries and are as either ‘process’ or
‘additive’ hurdles including high temperature, low temperature, water activity
, acidity, redox potential (Eh), competitive microorganisms (e.g. lactic acid bacteria)
and preservatives (e.g. nitrite, sorbate, sulphite). Recently the underlying
principles of these traditional methods have been defined and effective limits of
these factors for microbial growth, survival, and death have been established.
Recently, about 50 additional hurdles have been used in food preservation.
These hurdles include: ultrahigh pressure, mano-thermo-sonication, photodynamic
inactivation, modified atmosphere packaging of both non-respiring and respiring
products, edible coatings, ethanol, Maillard reaction products and bacteriocins.
Barrier Technology
To control food safety, providing barriers to
food contamination is a generally applied concept. The first barrier refers to outside
premises, such as fencing, to prevent unauthorized access to the facility. The access
of transport vehicles with raw materials and end-products, personnel, domestic and
non-domestic animals should be monitored and controlled. Factory site drainage and
storm water collection must be sufficient; areas within a 3-m perimeter of the factory
must be kept vegetation free to avoid pest breeding and harborage sites; a 10-cm
thick concrete curtain wall around the factory foundation at least 60 cm below ground
discourages rodents from entering the building; effluent treatment plants and waste
disposal units should be sited such that prevailing winds do not blow microbial
and dust aerosols into manufacturing areas.
The second barrier concerns the closing of factory
buildings. All entrances/exits (i.e., window and door openings, openings for vents,
air circulation lines, floor drains, etc.) must be designed for control over access,
flow or exit of personnel, raw and finished food products, air, process aids (process
water, process steam, food gases, etc.), waste, utilities (plant cooling and heating
water, plant steam, compressed air, electricity, etc.) and pests (insects, birds,
rodents, etc.). Floor drains must be screened to avoid rats from entering the food
plant via sewers; ventilator openings, including vents in the roof, should be screened
to prevent the entry of roof rats, insects and birds; gaps at the entrances of electrical
conduits, process and utility piping, which are convenient pathways for roof rats,
must be closed.
The third barrier is the segregation of restricted
areas (zones) within the plant, each of which has different hygienic requirements
and controlled access. The fourth barrier is the processing equipment (including
storage and conveying systems), which must have an adequate hygienic design and
must be closed to protect the food product from external contamination. When the
external contaminations have been eliminated, it is quit easier to handle
internal contaminations as well as other sources of food spoiling while
processing or after processing. Use of integrated preservation methods instead
of using single preservation method to keep food fresh and nourished is a well-known
fact, where it can further reduce the production cost as well as rigorous processing
methods that’s where Hurdle Technology come to play a major role.
Hurdle Technology
Hurdle technology was developed several
years ago as a new concept for the production of safe, stable, nutritious,
tasty and economical foods. It advocates the intelligent use of combinations of
different preservation factors or techniques ('hurdles') in order to achieve multi-target, mild but reliable preservation effects. Attractive applications
have been identified in many food areas. The microbial stability and safety of
most traditional and novel foods is based on a combination of several factors
(hurdles), which should not be overcome by the microorganisms present. This is
illustrated by the so-called hurdle effect. The hurdle effect is of fundamental
importance for the preservation of foods, since the hurdles in a stable product
control microbial spoilage, food-poisoning and, in some instances, the desired
fermentation process. Hurdle technology is
a method of ensuring that pathogens in food
products can be eliminated or
controlled. This means the food products will be safe for consumption, and
their shelf life will be extended. Hurdle technology
usually works by combining more than one approach. These approaches can be
thought of as "hurdles" the pathogen has to overcome if it is to
remain active in the food. The right combination of hurdles can ensure all
pathogens are eliminated or rendered harmless in the final product.
Hurdle technology has been defined by
Leistner (2000) as an intelligent combination of hurdles which secures the microbial
safety and stability as well as the organoleptic and nutritional quality and the economic
viability of food products. The organoleptic quality of the food
refers to its sensory properties that are its look, taste, smell and texture. The
hurdle concept illustrates only the well-known fact that complex interactions
of temperature, water activity, pH, redox potential, etc. are significant for
the microbial stability of foods. Examples of hurdles in a food system are high
temperature during processing, low temperature during storage, increasing the acidity, lowering the water activity or redox
potential, or the presence of preservatives.
According to the type of pathogens and how risky they are, the intensity of the
hurdles can be adjusted individually to meet consumer preferences in an economical
way, without compromising the safety of the product. Hurdle technology is used
in industrialized as well as in developing countries for the gentle but
effective preservation of foods.
Previously hurdle
technology, i.e., a combination of preservation methods, was used empirically
without much knowledge of the governing principles. Since about 20 years the
intelligent application of hurdle technology became more prevalent, because the
principles of major preservative factors for foods (e.g., temperature, pH, aw,
Eh, competitive flora), and their interactions, became better known.
Recently, the influence of food preservation methods on the physiology and behaviour
of microorganisms in foods, i.e. their homeostasis, metabolic exhaustion,
stress reactions, are taken into account, and the novel concept of multi-target
food preservation emerged. In the present contribution a brief introduction is
given on the potential hurdles for foods, the hurdle effect, and the hurdle
technology. However, emphasis is placed on the homeostasis, metabolic
exhaustion, and stress reactions of microorganisms related to hurdle
technology, and the prospects of the future goal of a multi-target preservation
of foods.
There can be significant synergistic effects between hurdles. For example, gram-positive bacteria include some of the more important spoilage
bacteria, such as Clostridium, Bacillus and Listeria.
A synergistic enhancement occurs if nisin is used against these bacteria in
combination with antioxidants, organic acids or other antimicrobials. Combining
antimicrobial hurdles in an intelligent way means other hurdles can be reduced,
yet the resulting food can have superior sensory qualities.
Hi Vindika, I like your way of visualising the microbial growth hurdles as a race track.
ReplyDeleteblunt question, would it be possible to share a high(er) resolution version of this picture? I would like to print it and hang it on our production wall. makes explaining the hurdle method a lot easier.
regards,
Paul ( the Netherlands)
Sorry for late reply Paul,
DeleteI actually got this image from internet, it is not copy righted as I remember, so there is no issue using them if you want. Hence, I don't have a higher resolution image with me, please get the help of a graphic guy, change the images little bit as to your company microbial list, that would be ideal for your circumstances I think.
Thanks for your thoughts.