ASHRAE REFRIGERATION IP CH 32-2010 FISHERY PRODUCTS《渔业产品》.pdf
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1、32.1CHAPTER 32FISHERY PRODUCTSFRESH FISHERY PRODUCTS . 32.1Care Aboard Vessels 32.1Shore Plant Procedure and Marketing 32.2Packaging Fresh Fish. 32.3Fresh Fish Storage . 32.3FROZEN FISHERY PRODUCTS. 32.4Packaging . 32.4Freezing Methods . 32.5Storage of Frozen Fish . 32.7Transportation and Marketing
2、. 32.9HE major types of fish and shellfish harvested from NorthTAmerican waters and used for food include the following: Groundfish (haddock, cod, whiting, flounder, and ocean perch),lobster, clams, scallops, snow crab, shrimp, capelin, herring, andsardines from New England and Atlantic CanadaOyster
3、s, clams, scallops, striped bass, and blue crab from theMiddle and South AtlanticShrimp, oysters, red snapper, clams, and mullet from the Gulf CoastLake herring, chubs, carp, buffalofish, catfish, yellow perch, andyellow pike from the Mississippi Valley and Great LakesAlaska pollock, Pacific pollock
4、, tuna, halibut, salmon, Pacificcod, various species of flatfish, king and snow crab (Chinoecetesopelio; about 200,000,000 lb annually), dungeness crab, scallops,shrimp, and oysters from the Pacific Coast and AlaskaCatfish, salmon, trout, oysters, and mussels from aquacultureoperations in various lo
5、cationsFish harvested from tropical waters are reported to have a sub-stantially longer shelf life than fish harvested from cold waters, pos-sibly because of the bacterial flora naturally associated with the fish.Bacteria associated with fish from tropical waters are mainly gram-negative mesophiles,
6、 whereas those that cause spoilage of fish dur-ing refrigerated storage are usually gram-negative psychrophiles.The time required for this bacterial population shift (from meso-philes to psychrophiles) after refrigeration may account for theincreased shelf life.The major industrial fish used for fis
7、h meal and oil is menhadenfrom the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. Also, fish parts not used forhuman consumption are often used to manufacture fish meal and oil.Fish meal and oil are the principal components of feed used in theaquaculture of trout and salmon, and is a dietary component forpoultry and pig
8、s. Fish oil is used in margarine, in paints, and in thetanning industry. It is also refined for pharmaceutical purposes.This chapter covers preservation and processing of fresh and fro-zen fishery products; handling of fresh fish aboard vessels andashore; the technology of freezing fish; and present
9、 commercialtrends in freezing, frozen storage, and distribution of seafood.See Chapter 40 for additional information regarding fisheryproducts for precooked and prepared foods, and Chapter 26 formore on marine refrigeration.HACCP System. Many procedures for control of microorgan-isms are managed by
10、the Hazard Analysis and Critical ControlPoint (HACCP) system of food safety. Each food manufacturingsite should have a HACCP team to develop and implement itsHACCP plan. See Chapter 22 for additional information on sanita-tion.FRESH FISHERY PRODUCTSCARE ABOARD VESSELSAfter fish are brought aboard a
11、vessel, they must be promptly andproperly handled to ensure maximum quality. Trawl-caught fish onthe New England and Canadian Atlantic coasts, such as haddockand cod, are usually eviscerated, washed, and then iced down in thepens of the vessels hold. Canadian (offshore), Icelandic, U.K., andother Eu
12、ropean fleets ice fish in boxes for optimum quality. Becauseof their small size, other groundfish (e.g., ocean perch, whiting,flounder) are not eviscerated and are not always washed. Instead,they are iced down directly in the hold of the vessel.Crustaceans, such as lobsters and many species of crabs
13、, are usu-ally kept alive on the vessel without refrigeration. Warm-watershrimp are beheaded, washed, and stored in ice in the hold; on somevessels, however, the catch is frozen either in refrigerated brine or inplate freezers. Cold-water shrimp are stored whole in ice or inchilled sea water, or the
14、y may be cooked in brine, chilled, and storedin containers surrounded with ice.Freshwater fish in the Great Lakes and Mississippi River areasare caught in trap nets, haul seines, or gill nets. They are sortedaccording to species into 50 or 100 lb boxes, which are kept on thedeck of the vessel. In mo
15、st cases, fishing vessels carry ice aboard,and fish are landed the day they are caught.Freshwater fish in Canadian lakes are iced down in the summer-time and stored at collecting stations on the lakes, where they arepicked up by a collecting boat with a refrigerated hold. Winter-caught Canadian fres
16、hwater and Arctic saltwater fish are usuallyweather-frozen on the ice immediately after catching and are mar-keted as frozen fish.Line-caught fish of the Pacific Northwest, such as halibut caughtlargely by bottom long-line gear and salmon caught by trolling gear,are eviscerated, washed, and iced in
17、the pens of the vessel. Pacificsalmon caught by seines and gill nets for cannery use are usuallystored whole for several days, either aboard vessels or ashore in tanksof seawater refrigerated to 30F. A small but significant volume ofhalibut is held similarly in refrigerated seawater aboard vessels.
18、Tunacaught offshore by seiners or clipper vessels are usually brine-frozenat sea. However, tuna caught inshore by smaller trollers or seiners areoften iced in the round or refrigerated with a brine spray.Fish raised by aquaculture farms are usually harvested and soldas required by the fresh fish mar
19、ket. They are usually shipped incontainers in which they are surrounded by ice.IcingFish lose quality because of bacterial or enzymatic activity orboth. Reducing storage temperature retards these activities signifi-cantly, thus delaying spoilage and autolytic deterioration.Low temperatures are parti
20、cularly effective in delaying growth ofpsychrophilic bacteria, which are primarily responsible for spoilageof nonfatty fish. The shelf life of species such as haddock and cod isdoubled for each 7 to 10F decrease in storage temperature withinthe range of 60 to 30F.The preparation of this chapter is a
21、ssigned to TC 10.9, Refrigeration Appli-cation for Foods and Beverages.32.2 2010 ASHRAE HandbookRefrigerationTo be effective, ice must be clean when used. Bacteriologicaltests on ice in the hold of a fishing vessel showed bacterial counts ashigh as 5 billion per gram of ice. These results indicate t
22、hat (1) chlo-rinated or potable water should be used to make the ice at the plant,(2) ice should be stored under sanitary conditions, and (3) unusedice should be discarded at the end of each trip.Both flake and crushed block ice are used aboard fishing vessels,although flake ice is more common becau
23、se it is cheaper to produceand easier to handle mechanically.The amount of ice used aboard vessels varies with the particularfishery and vessel; however, it is essential to provide enough icearound the fish to obtain a proper cooling rate (Figure 1). A com-mon ratio of ice to fish used in bulk icing
24、 on New England trawlersis one part ice to three parts fish. Experiments on British trawlersin boxing fish at sea with one part ice to two parts fish demon-strated improved quality in the landed fish, and, as ice has becomemore plentiful and less costly relative to the value of fish, the ratioof ice
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