This Brief describes the chemical features of canned food products and
gives background information on the technology of canning foods. It
explains how canned foods are different from other packaged foods, and
illustrates and discusses their unique properties, including risks and
failures. Canned foods are usually considered to offer a particularly
long shelf-life and durability. An understanding of their properties and
influences on their durability is therefore of great importance in the
industrial production, and this Brief offers a compact introduction to
this topic.
The authors focus on thermally-preserved foods. They explain that the
right choice of thermal treatment method (e.g. pasteurisation,
sterilisation) as well as process parameters (e.g. time, temperature) is
additionally influenced by criteria such as pH, water content, the
presence and concentration of fatty molecules, of calcium, etc.
So-called 'survival curves' can help in determining the methodology of
choice, and the Brief introduces the reader to this concept. The authors
also address defects and failures. They introduce selected indicators,
which can help identifying failures of the entire food/packaging system,
and demonstrate how image and visual analysis can be applied in quality
controls. The explanations and industrial production of canned foods are
exemplified with the case of canned tomato sauces and beans.