LU1 Intro StudentPPT
LU1 Intro StudentPPT
Lecture 1:
Introduction to Food Chemistry
OUTLINES
At the end of this learning unit, student should be
able to:
Define food
1.
Basic
4. food 2.
molecules
3.
CHEMISTRY OF WATER
•Water is predominant constituents in many foods.
•As a medium, water support chemical reactions.
Why? How?
WATER MOLECULES
Smallest and simplest of all food molecules: H20
STRUCTURE OF WATER
electrostatic attraction
between the ð+
hydrogen and the ð-
oxygen in adjacent
molecules
1. 2.
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WHY DOES ICE FLOAT?
aw = P/Po =ERH/100
P=
Po =
ERH =
13
WATER ACTIVITY
Water has different levels of binding and thus activity or
availability in a food sample
< 0.6
FREE WATER VERSUS BOUND WATER
Other definition
of water activity :
3.
2.
1.
A portion of the 1.
total water
content present
in a product is 2.
strongly bound
to specific sites 3.
on the chemicals
that comprise in
the product. 4.
5.
FREE WATER VERSUS BOUND WATER
Reducing the amount of free--or unbound-
-water – minimizes undesirable chemical
changes that occur during storage.
The processes used to reduce the amount
of free water in consumer products include
techniques like __________, _________ and
__________.
Freezing is another common approach for
controlling spoilage. Water in frozen foods
is in the form of ice crystals and therefore
unavailable to microorganisms and for
reactions with food component
SORPTION ISOTHERMS
Sorption isotherms
A plot of moisture or
water content (mass of
water, g /mass of dry
material) of food vs. aw
The relationship
between aw–moisture
content for most foods
is a sigmoidal
shaped curved called
the sorption
isotherms.
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Moisture Sorption Isotherm
Moisture content
aw
SORPTION ISOTHERMS
Sorption isotherm prepared by adsorption
(starting from the dry state) will not necessarily
be the same as an isotherm prepared by
desorption (starting from the wet state). This
phenomenon of different moisture values vs aw by
the two methods is called moisture sorption
hysteresis and is exhibited by many foods.
Hysteresis represents the difference in aw between
the adsorption and desorption isotherms
WATER SORPTION HYSTERESIS
Zone/ Description
Type
3
Moisture Sorption Isotherm
Zone 2
Moisture content (d.w.b.)
Zone 1
Loosely bound water
Bulk water
aw
WATER ACTIVITY
Table 1 The water activities of various food-stuffs
Micro-organism aw
Normal bacteria 0.91
Normal yeasts 0.88
Normal moulds 0.80
Halophilic bacteria 0.75
Xerophilic moulds 0.65
Osmophilic yeasts 0.60
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WATER ACTIVITY
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FOOD STABILITY
A. B. C.
Maillard browning
The Maillard reaction :
Effects of Lipid
Oxidation
FOOD STABILITY
Vitamin and pigment stability
Ascorbic acid very unstable at high aw
Stability best in dehydrated foods - type II water
C) Enzyme stability
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Shelf-Stability Table
aw values pH Values
< 0.88 SS SS SS SS
0.88-0.90 SS SS SS Not SS
SS = Shelf Stable
FOOD STABILITY
Importance of aw in foods
Food stability directly related Vit C loss
to aw
The effect of aw on process that
can influence food quality is
presented in Figure.
Influences storage, microbial
growth, chemical & enzymatic
deteriorations, etc.
3 Benefits of decrease aw :
a)
b)
c)
Food shelf life (storage stability) as a
function of aw
Non-enzymatic browning is a
chemical process that produces a Foods with a __________ have
brown color in foods without the fewer reactions; therefore, they have a
activity of enzymes longer shelf life
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HUMECTANTS
Definition:
Examples:
WATER ACTIVITY
Temperature dependency of the sorption isotherm can
be a major problem and often overlooked
Example:
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CONTROLLING AW IN FOODS