1st Edition

Juice Processing Quality, Safety and Value-Added Opportunities

Edited By Victor Falguera, Albert Ibarz Copyright 2014
    402 Pages 133 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    402 Pages 133 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    The ability to provide quality juices that contain proper vitamins and nutritional components strongly depends on the processes fruits undergo during the various stages of industrial manufacturing. New technologies have been developed to help ensure the production of quality juices without neglecting safety. Covering both new approaches to traditional issues and innovative processes, Juice Processing: Quality, Safety and Value-Added Opportunities addresses various aspects of fruit juice processing and other issues related to the use of by-products generated in this industry.

    The book begins with a chapter highlighting the importance of the fruit juice sector and describing the general process of fruit juice manufacturing. The text explores current trends in juice production, reviews the main superfruits, and discusses methods for using juice waste by-products, presenting citrus and grape juice as examples. The book covers assessing juice quality and authenticity, and how to evaluate fruit properties using the principles of rheology as well as examining sensory attributes. It also examines alternative techniques for improving fruit juice quality, including both thermal and nonthermal emerging technologies, their fundamentals, and their main effects on important features of fruit juices.

    Emphasizing product quality, safety, and nutrition, the chapter on juice packaging summarizes the materials, techniques, and technologies currently used as well as novel packaging for increasing shelf life and decreasing environmental impact. The authors address issues concerning spoiling microorganisms and biological and chemical hazards. They also examine public and private standards and regulations, which need to be reworked to keep up with today’s food-related concerns.

    Squeezing Fruits in the Second Decade of the Twenty-First Century: The Current Situation of the Juice Industry
    Víctor Falguera and Albert Ibarz

    Product Innovation: Current Trends in Fruit Juice Production to Meet Market Demands
    Miguel Angel Cubero Márquez

    New Trends in Fruit Juices: Superfruits
    Francisco López Bonillo

    Recovery and Use of By-Products from Fruit Juice Production
    Nuria Martí, José Lorente, Manuel Valero, Albert Ibarz, and Domingo Saura

    Assessing Juice Quality: Measuring Quality and Authenticity
    Núria Rafel, Xavier Costa, and Carlos Berdun

    Assessing Juice Quality: Advances in the Determination of Rheological Properties of Fruit Juices and Derivatives
    Pedro E.D. Augusto and Alfredo A. Vitali

    Assessing Juice Quality: Analysis of Organoleptic Properties of Fruit Juices
    Gemma Echeverría and María Luisa López

    Utilization of Enzymes in Fruit Juice Production
    Jordi Pagán

    Advances in Fruit Juice Conventional Thermal Processing
    José Lorente, Nuria Martí, and Domingo Saura

    Thermal Emerging Technologies in Fruit Juice Processing
    M.V. Traffano-Schiffo, N. Balaguer, Marta Castro-Giráldez, and Pedro J. Fito

    Nonthermal Emerging Technologies in Fruit Juice Processing
    Olga Martín-Belloso, Ángel Robert Marsellés-Fontanet, Robert Soliva-Fortuny, and Pedro Élez-Martínez

    Pressure Treatments in Juice Processing: Homogenization Pressures Applied to Mandarin and Blueberry Juices
    Juan Manuel Castagnini, Esther Betoret, Noelia Betoret, and Pedro Fito

    Membrane Processes in Juice Production
    M. Isabel Iborra, Maria Isabel Alcaina Miranda, and Silvia Álvarez

    Juice Packaging
    Maribel Cornejo-Mazón, Darío Iker Téllez-Medina, Liliana Alamilla Beltrán, and Gustavo Fidel Gutiérrez-López

    Spoiling Microorganisms in Fruit Juices
    Antonio J. Ramos and Sonia Marín

    Safety in Fruit Juice Processing: Chemical and Microbiological Hazards
    Sonia Marín and Antonio J. Ramos

    Public and Private Standards and Regulation Concerning Fruit Juices
    Antonio Martínez, Dolores Rodrigo, Josep Arbós, and Yvonne Colomer

    Biography

    Víctor Falguera received two PhDs, one of them in agrifood science and technology at the University of Lleida and the other one in engineering and advanced technologies at the University of Barcelona. He worked for several years in the Food Technology Department of the University of Lleida in topics related to fruit juice processing, such as non-thermal technologies, fruit-derived enzymes, and fluid food physical and chemical properties analysis. Having published more than 50 scientific papers, Dr. Falguera is one of the founding members of the platform Agricultural Knowledge and Innovation Services (AKIS International).

    Albert Ibarz received a PhD in chemical engineering from the University of Barcelona. He is a technical engineer in the agricultural and food industries for the Polytechnic University of Catalonia. Dr. Ibarz is a professor of food technology at the University of Lleida. He has published more than 200 scientific articles, mostly on rheology, chemistry, biochemistry and photochemistry kinetics, and UV treatments. He has presented more than 150 communications to national and international congresses. Dr. Ibarz is coauthor of three food engineering books and author and coauthor of eight book chapters.