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FOOD SAFETY

CFAES researchers working to preserve beverages’ safety sans additives
Monday, 23 July, 2018, 08 : 00 AM [IST]
Columbus
Researchers in the College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences (CFAES) at The Ohio State University are seeking to remedy the issue of preserving the safety of beverages without the use of chemical additives and preservatives, so that consumers have healthier beverage options with a great taste.

A team of CFAES scientists has been awarded a four-year, $8,91,000 grant from the US Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture to develop an innovative manufacturing technology that will preserve food and beverages using wholesome, recognisable ingredients, no artificial preservatives and reduced use of heat, thanks to a type of high-pressure-based shear technology.

Called Ultra-Shear Technology (UST), this new method will allow beverage companies to manufacture healthier beverages by reducing thermal exposure through the combined application of elevated pressure, shear and controlled times and temperatures.

And it is not just drinks that might soon be preserved in a much healthier way. “UST can also be used by food manufacturers in the healthier processing of sauces, condiments and other foods,” said V M Balasubramaniam, professor, food engineering, CFAES, and leader of the research project.

His laboratory, with a multi-disciplinary team of microbiologists, chemists and nutritionists, investigates innovative food technologies and then works with industry to implement them.

“Health-conscious consumers pay close attention to ingredients in beverages and tend to avoid products perceived to contain artificial or chemical-sounding ingredients, although such ingredients may be scientifically proven to be safe and functional,” Balasubramaniam said.

“With a projected global population of 9.1 billion people by 2050, meeting the growing demand for beverages and other foods with substantiated health benefits and consumer-desired quality attributes is a major challenge,” he added.

“The development of cost-effective, next-generation, gentler industrial food manufacturing technologies for the preservation of healthy beverages is a critical need,” Balasubramaniam said.

Known internationally for his research on high-pressure and other types of nonthermal processing, or safely processing food using significantly less heat, Balasubramaniam holds joint appointments in the CFAES departments of food science and technology and food, agricultural and biological engineering.

Other members of the CFAES research team include Ahmed Yousef, professor, food microbiology; Rafael Jimenez-Flores, J T ‘Stubby’ Parker endowed chair in dairy foods, and Christopher Simons, assistant professor, sensory science.

The team will collaborate with scientists and engineers at Pressure BioSciences Inc, a Massachusetts-based company that manufactures high-pressure-based equipment and laboratory instrumentation for the life science industry.

Edmund Ting, senior vice-president at the company, will lead the development of the laboratory-scale and pilot plant equipment that CFAES researchers will use in the research project.

“It has been rewarding to see the significant growth of high-pressure processing in many areas of food processing over the last 25 years,” he said, adding, “I believe UST has equal if not greater applications than high-pressure processing, both within and outside the food and beverage industries.

“We are pleased to collaborate with experts at Ohio State to advance the commercialisation of the UST platform for the food and beverage market,” Ting said. 

“The UST equipment developed under the research project will be used to demonstrate the technology to the beverage and food processing industry through pilot plant demonstrations and testing,” Balasubramaniam said.

UST will also be shared with food processors through webinars, short courses and food processor fact sheets.

“The UST technology is expected to be particularly beneficial for medium- and small-scale food processors and entrepreneurs who otherwise have limited technical resources to evaluate such novel food manufacturing processes,” Balasubramaniam said, adding, “The ultimate goal is for consumers to benefit from the increased availability of wholesome, healthy beverage and food options.”
 
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