A number of food engineering operations, in which heat is not used as a
preserving factor, have been employed and are applied for preparation
(cleaning, sorting, etc.), conversion (milling, agglomeration, etc.) or
preservation (irradiation, high pressure processing, pulsed electric
fields, etc.) purposes in the food industry. This book presents a
comprehensive treatise of all normally used food engineering operations
that are carried out at room (or ambient) conditions, whether they are
aimed at producing microbiologically safe foods with minimum alteration
to sensory and nutritive properties, or they constitute routine
preparative or transformation operations. The book is written for both
undergraduate and graduate students, as well as for educators and
practicing food process engineers. It reviews theoretical concepts,
analyzes their use in operating variables of equipment, and discusses in
detail different applications in diverse food processes.