“Technological convergence” of preventive nutrition with non thermal processing

Post COVID‐19 pandemic realization and expanding consumer demand for functional nutrition have compelled the food industry to focus on one, clean‐label technologies to improve energy expenditure, microbial inactivation, shelf stability, and retention of functional nutrients, and second on the system...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of food processing and preservation Vol. 46; no. 9
Main Authors Dey, Gargi, Ghosh, Annesha, Tangirala, Rajendra K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.09.2022
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Summary:Post COVID‐19 pandemic realization and expanding consumer demand for functional nutrition have compelled the food industry to focus on one, clean‐label technologies to improve energy expenditure, microbial inactivation, shelf stability, and retention of functional nutrients, and second on the systematic evaluation of food matrices for bioactive potential (functionality) and designing novel food matrices and products healthier than the existing formats. The food industry is rapidly heading toward a “technological convergence” with the goal of establishing highly efficient processing technologies for safe, shelf‐stable functional products. Novelty impact statement In this review, we evaluated the utility and efficiency of various non‐thermal processing technologies (cold plasma, ultra‐sonication, high pressure, pulsed electric field, pulsed light processing) with respect to their capabilities to retain phytonutrient functionality and antioxidant potential in processed foods. The review also discusses existing gaps in current non thermal processing techniques and explores potential improvements necessary to foster reliable next‐generation processing technologies.
ISSN:0145-8892
1745-4549
DOI:10.1111/jfpp.16508