ASHRAE REFRIGERATION SI CH 38-2010 FRUIT JUICE CONCENTRATES AND CHILLED JUICE PRODUCTS《浓缩果汁和冷藏果汁产品》.pdf
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1、38.1CHAPTER 38FRUIT JUICE CONCENTRATES AND CHILLED JUICE PRODUCTSORANGE JUICE 38.1Orange Concentrate. 38.1Cold Storage 38.2Concentration Methods 38.3Quality Control 38.4Chilled Juice 38.4Refrigeration 38.5Pure Fruit Juice Powders . 38.5OTHER CITRUS JUICES 38.6NONCITRUS JUICES 38.6Pineapple Juice 38.
2、6Apple Juice . 38.6Grape Juice 38.6Strawberry and Other Berry Juices . 38.7ITRUS products, especially orange juice, comprise the lar-Cgest percentage of the total volume of juices sold in the UnitedStates. Much of the technology used in processing noncitrus juiceswas developed from citrus processing
3、.ORANGE JUICEORANGE CONCENTRATEProcessed orange juice is sold in four principal forms:1. Frozen concentrate (3-plus-1 concentration, in which three vol-umes of water are added to one volume of concentrate for recon-stitution) in a variety of package sizes. These are the familiarretail products.2. Co
4、ncentrate in bulk at 65 Brix. This is an intermediate productthat is bought and sold daily as futures on the CommodityExchange. Most of this product will ultimately be sold in one ofthe other forms.3. Chilled orange juice, which is ready to drink when poured fromthe carton. It is either reconstitute
5、d concentrate or nonconcen-trated juice. By law, these two products must be labeled “fromconcentrate” or “not from concentrate.”4. Institutional or restaurant concentrates in special packaging at4-plus-1 or higher concentrations.After processing, frozen citrus concentrates in retail (3-plus-1)packag
6、es must be stored at 18C. Highly concentrated bulk juice(65 Brix) may be satisfactorily stored at about 9C. Chilled sin-gle-strength juices are stored at about 1 to 0C.Figure 1 shows a schematic flow diagram of citrus processing.The Brix scale is a hydrometer scale that indicates the percentageby ma
7、ss of sugar in a solution at a specified temperature.Selecting, Handling, and Processing Fresh FruitSelection. Fruit is selected for proper quality and maturity.Some fruit that is blemished but sound in quality, referred to aspackinghouse eliminations, is used. A major portion of the crop istaken di
8、rectly from the grove to the processing plant. To be mature,the fruit must have the proper Brix-acid ratio and the juice contentand Brix must be above specified values. Fruit should be handledwithout delay because no real maturing occurs after harvesting;instead, the temperature and condition of the
9、 fruit determine therate of deterioration. Citrus fruit is sufficiently rugged to withstandmechanical handling on conveyors, elevators, and belts, providedthat the fruit is processed within a day or two after picking. Samplesare taken mechanically as fruit enters the bins, and records ofchemical ana
10、lyses are maintained. Usually fruit from two or morebins is used simultaneously to improve uniformity. The fruit passesover inspection tables both before and after temporary storage inbins, and damaged or deteriorated fruit is removed.Washing. Before juice extraction, the fruit is wetted by sprays.T
11、he wetting agent is dispensed onto the fruit as it travels over rotat-ing brushes. Water sprays near the end of the washer unit rinse thefruit. A sanitizing solution may be used to sanitize conveyors andelevators.Juice Extraction. Individual high-speed mechanical juiceextractors handle from 300 to 7
12、00 pieces of fruit per minute. Somemachines halve the fruit and ream or squeeze the juice from the half.Other machines insert a tube through the middle of the fruit andsqueeze the juice through fine holes into the tube, at the same timesieving away the seeds and large pieces of membrane. After theju
13、ice has been extracted, it passes to finishers that remove theremaining seeds, pieces of peel, and excess cell or fruit membrane.In the past, this was a comparatively simple process involving one ortwo stages, but it has become complicated in recent years and variesextensively from plant to plant. U
14、sually, one or two stages of screw-type finishers separate most of the pulp from the juice.Pulp washing, in which soluble solids in separated segment andcell walls are recovered by countercurrent extraction with water, ispermitted in Florida, provided that the resultant extract is not used infrozen
15、orange concentrates. It may be used in other formulatedproducts permitted by the Federal Standard of Identity for frozenconcentrated orange juice.The juice or pulp wash liquor from the finishers may requiretreatment in high-speed desludging centrifuges that remove sus-pended matter before transferri
16、ng the juice to the evaporator. Thesecentrifuges have peripheral discharges that open and close at inter-vals to discharge a thick suspension of pulp cells. This operationdecreases the viscosity of juice in the evaporator, improves the effi-ciency of evaporation, and improves the appearance of the f
17、inalproduct. Special means are used to classify orange pulp for inclu-sion in products with a high pulp content.Heat Treatment. When frozen concentrated orange juice wasfirst developed, minimal heat treatment was used to maintain opti-mum flavor. Such concentrate, if prepared from good, sound fruit,
18、remains stable for a considerable time at 18C and for nearly ayear at 15C. However, with large-scale production, it is not pos-sible to ensure storage below 15C. Concentrates originally ofgood quality tend to gel or clarify rapidly during storage. Heattreatment inactivates enzymes responsible for th
19、e development ofthese defects during improper storage. Earlier methods usedsteam-heated plate pasteurizers, but heat treatment is now almostuniversally included as an integral part of heat conservation in theevaporation process.The preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 10.9, Refrigeration Ap
20、pli-cation for Foods and Beverages.38.2 2010 ASHRAE HandbookRefrigeration (SI)Evaporation-Water Removal. Removal of water follows juiceextraction and preparation. See the section on Concentration Meth-ods for details.Flavor Fortification. Originally, frozen concentrated orangejuice was overconcentra
21、ted, and fresh juice (cutback juice) wasadded to reduce the concentration to the desired level and providefresh flavor in the final product. This process is used extensively infrozen concentrates, but flavor levels cannot be standardized by thismethod alone.Essential oil from orange peel does not by
22、 itself supply com-pletely balanced fresh flavor, but it is now used extensively to con-trol flavor intensity. Some peel oil is found in the cutback juice, butlittle remains in juice from the evaporator. Adding peel oil to the fin-ished concentrate, at approximately 0.014% by volume in the recon-sti
23、tuted juice, has become standard practice.Several variations have been introduced to supplement the use ofpeel oil and cutback fresh juice for flavor fortification. In mostcases, vapor from the first stage of concentration is used to producean essence that is restored to the final concentrate to enh
24、ance flavor.Although cutback fresh juice and cold-pressed peel oil are com-monly added, most operations depend heavily on essence recoveryand its incorporation into the final product.Blending, Packaging, and Freezing. The final step in pro-cessing is the blending of concentrate with flavor-enhancing
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