Blueberries can be canned, mainly used for pie fillings, are cleaned and
inspected, placed in cans, and the cans are then filled with water or
with a 10-30% sugar solution.
Canned blueberries can be light or heavy syrup packed or water packed.
For this fresh or frozen blueberries are place in cans, light syrup or
water is added to cover the head space and can are sealed and heat
processed at about 93-95 C q-with 25-30° C minute holding time.
Canned blueberry pie filling, in which the berries are cooked, sweetened
and packed in a thickened liquid are very popular in the United States
and Great Britain.
Canned blueberries may vary from a highly attractive free-flowing
product to one is clumped into a firm mass. Clumping can be greatly
reduced by cooling with agitation, which apparently interfered with the
bonding together of berries by surface wax or cutin.
Blueberries in can
Just another blog about food processing and the important of food processing. It is about the conversion of raw materials or ingredients into the consumer product. Food processing also can be defined as the branch of manufacturing that starts with raw animal, vegetable, or marine materials and transforms them into intermediate foods stuff or edible products through the application of labor, machinery, energy, and scientific knowledge.
Wednesday, September 05, 2018
Most Popular Articles
-
Yes, alcohol can indeed be made from dates using a traditional process known in some cultures as Dakhai. This method utilizes the natural s...
-
Acids play a crucial role in soft drink manufacturing, contributing both to flavor enhancement and product preservation. Among the most comm...
-
The thermal treatment of the cream, also known as ripening, is the most time-consuming step in butter production; however, it governs the cr...
-
Spray drying instant coffee refer to a type of coffee that has been treated with a spray drying process that remove all the water from the c...
-
Alchemy has its origins in Greece, and around the year 300 BC it is referred to in Egyptian and Babylonian records. Aristotle (384-322 BC) i...