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Packaging with built-in preservatives

Packaging with built-in preservatives
2019-07-04

From:FoodProcessing

As consumers demand a reduction in food additives, research is underway to improve the commercial viability of a new food packaging material that actively reduces the need for preservatives while decreasing food waste.

This project is one of the two Cornell University food science research projects awarded $1.8 million by the US Department of Agriculture's National Institute of Food and Agriculture. The other project is working on improving juice and beverage production to keep the fresh taste in concentrates.

Ever-increasing food waste represents an emerging threat to the economic and environmental sustainability of the US food system, said Julie M Goddard, associate professor of food science. Preservatives are added to foods to retain quality with a longer shelf life, but consumers are demanding a reduction in additives.

However, this consumer movement leads to unintended results: food that spoils more quickly, which could cause a surge in food waste.

"We've shown that you can introduce preservative functionality into packaging materials, so that we can reduce the additives in foods and beverages without losing product quality," Goddard said. These 'active packaging' materials are a promising new technology, but technological hurdles and consumer mindsets have so far prevented their successful commercial translation, she added.

Removing the preservatives in food products — such as sauces, mayonnaise or salad dressing — would severely diminish shelf life, even with refrigeration. But by adding chelating agents — compounds that can sequester metal ions — to the jar or bottle itself, the food can last much longer without the additives seeping into the food.

"There is a lot of benefit in having fewer additives but gaining the preservative quality built in to the package so they don't migrate to the food," she said.




Graduate student Josh Herskovitz conducts research on active packaging in the laboratory of food science professor Julie Goddard. Credit: Cornell University.


During the research phase, the researchers will work directly with consumers and producers to ensure that the packaging material meets food-production, supply chain needs and that consumers are more likely to accept this new technology.

Juice concentrate project
For the other project, Carmen Moraru and Olga Padilla-Zakour, both professors of food science, will lead research on using reverse and forward osmosis filtration and other cold processes to create nutritious, high-quality and tasty juices and beverages in an energy-efficient way.

Currently, juice processors use heat to create juice concentrate, but heat changes the product's nutritional and sensory profiles.

"Our combination nonthermal process maintains product quality and makes the juice concentrate taste like it is fresh," Moraru said.

Also, juice concentration consumes energy. "With this cold process technology, we can save energy and conduct the concentration at a fraction of the thermal evaporation cost," she said.

The researchers will examine different filtration conditions for specific juices and other beverages.

Image credit: ©stock.adobe.com/au/AlenKadr

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