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Food Technology & Production

Food Technology & Production. in a Global perspective Johan Krop. Who are you meeting today?. Johan Krop Program manager Process & Food Technology Senior lecturer Academy of Technology, Innovation & Society incl. Engineering, Environment and Design programs

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Food Technology & Production

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  1. Food Technology & Production in a Global perspective Johan Krop

  2. Who are you meeting today? • Johan Krop Program manager Process & Food Technology Senior lecturer Academy of Technology, Innovation & Society incl. Engineering, Environment and Design programs The Hague University of Applied Sciences The Netherlands

  3. 25th anniversary of theFaculty of Agricultural Technology • Congratulations with the 25th anniversary of the Faculty of Agricultural Technology. • Thank you very much for inviting me. • Saya ucapkan selamat merayakan ulang tahun yang ke dua puluh lima tahun Fakultas Technoloki Pertanian. • Terima kasih saya bisa hadir bersama kalian semua. • Lan kulo ngucapin slamet untuk rong poloh limo perayaan ulang tahune kalian • Matur suwon pansenengan semua ngundang kulo mriki.

  4. Global : world wide & not detailed The world is small

  5. ROUND like an ice BALL …or a cookie or hamburger

  6. Food Technology • Multinational or International companies • Production on an Industrial scale

  7. Production Processes From low quality raw materials to high valuable products • Soy beans to soy food products & soy oil • Milk to cheese & other dairy products • Cocoa beans to Chocolate • Sugar beet/cane to sweet crystal sugar & alcohol • Cereals or grains to beer • Palm fruit to edible palm oil • Vegetable oil to biofuel • Crude mineral oil to refinery products like fuel & plastic

  8. Local vs Global and Traditional vs Industrial Subjects: • Soy food • Cheese • Chocolate • Sugar • Beer • Palm oil • Biofuel

  9. Soy Food Technology Although soy foods have been consumed for more than 1000 years, only for the past 25 years have they made an inroad into Western cultures and diets. Soy foods are typically divided into two categories: non fermented and fermented. Traditional non fermented soy food include fresh green soy beans, whole dry soy beans, soy nuts, soy sprouts, whole-fat soy flour, soy milk and soy milk products, tofu, okara and yuba. Traditional fermented soy food include tempeh, miso, soy sauces, natto and fermented tofu and soy milk products.

  10. Flow chart of tempeh production. Soybeans I De-hull  Hulls (mechanical or by soaking) I Water  Soak 100 °C for 30 min in acidified water (with lactic or acetic acid to pH 4.3-5.3 I Cook in soak water for 90 min at 38°C I Drain and dry soybeans  Water I Rhizopus oligosporus Inoculate and bag . I Incubate at 35-38 °C & 75-78% relative humidity for 18 to 24 hours. I Refrigerate

  11. Tempeh Tempeh is a fermented soy food and is unique in its texture, flavor and versatility. It originated in Indonesia, where today it is still the most popular soy food. Tempeh, while not as popular as tofu in the United States, lends itself easily to being used as a meat alternative because of its chewy texture and distinct flavor. As a result, a wide variety of tempeh-based meat analogues are available. Tempeh is a cake of cooked and fermented soy beans held together by the mycelium of the fungus Rhizopusoligosporus. Tempeh can then be further processed or packaged and pasteurized for distribution.

  12. Cheese making

  13. Composition of Milk vs. Cheese Milk (stand.)Gouda cheese • Fat (%) 3.5 30 • Protein (%) 3.5 25 • Water (%) 87 40 • Lactose (%) 4.6 • Lactic acid (%) 1 • Milk salts (%) 0.7 1.6 • NaCl (%) 1.6-2.0

  14. Cocoa bean processing & Chocolate making

  15. Fermentation, refining and tempering • Cocoa beans from Indonesia, Ghana, Brazil • Fermentation is essential for development of appropriate flavors from precursors. • The length of the fermentation also affects the aroma, so if well-developed aroma is wanted the beans have fermentation for a longer time. • Fermented and dried cocoa beans will be refined to a roasted nib by winnowing and roasting. • The ingredients required for chocolate manufacture are cocoa liquor, cocoa butter, sugar or other sweeteners, milk fat & powder, and emulsifiers(lecithin).

  16. Sugar from beet or cane Molasses Alcohol Production Unit

  17. Global production of sugar • Sugar is produced in 121 Countries and global production now exceeds 120 Million tons a year. • Approximately 70% is produced from sugar cane, a very tall grass with big stems which is grown in the tropical countries. • The remaining 30% is produced from sugar beet.

  18. Beer brewing Egyptian wooden model of beer making

  19. Beer in Indonesia • Bintang is a subsidiary of the giant Dutch brewer Heineken that claims to be the world’s major beer exporter, selling to 180 countries. • The raw products used to make beer are an international mix. The malt comes from South Australia and Europe the yeast from Holland. • The Mojokerto brewery only makes Bintang. The West Java brewery at Tangerang also produces Heineken. • There’s no way the two can be mixed. Nor can you tell by taste whether a Bintang has been made in Mojokerto or Tangerang. The only difference is the code on the label. • Although beer is not labelled halal (allowed) in Indonesia, nor is it haram (forbidden) to Muslims.

  20. How low/non-alcohol beer is made • Low-alcohol beer starts out as regular alcoholic beer, which is then cooked in order to evaporate the alcohol. • Most modern breweries also utilize vacuum evaporation to preserve flavor and speed up the boiling process. • An alternative process called reversed osmosis does not require heating. • The beer is passed through a filter with pores are small enough that only alcohol and water (and a few volatile acids) can pass through. • A last alternative process is to make use of a different yeast strain.

  21. Alcohol production process Molasses

  22. Crude oil refinery

  23. Palm oil • As of 2009, Indonesia is the largest producer of palm oil, surpassing Malaysia in 2006, producing more than 20.9 million tonnes. The Indonesian aspires to become the world's top producer of palm oil. • The use of palm oil in food products is often the focus of environmental activist groups, due to it being documented as a cause of substantial and often irreversible damage to the natural environment.

  24. Palm oil processing • Palm oil products are made using milling and refining processes. • Crystallization and separation processes to obtain solid (stearin), and liquid (olein) fractions. • Physical refining removes smells and coloration, to produce refined bleached deodorized palm oil (RBDPO). • Free fatty acids are used as an important raw material in the manufacture of soaps, washing powders and other hygiene and personal care products

  25. Biofuel production

  26. Fermentation & Distillation Fermentation from any feedstock containing fermentable sugars. • Sugar from cane/beet, agave, grape • Starch from cereals, patato after enzym reaction • Cellulose from wood, paper through acidic hydrolysis Alcohol yield up to 50 kg per 100 kg of sugar Distillation based on the separation process of components with different boiling points and physical properties. Alcohol yield up to 96% strength by volume

  27. Biodiesel production

  28. Chemistry of biodiesel CH2OOR1 catalyst CH2OH |  | CHOOR2 + 3CH3OH  3CH3OORx + CHOH | | CH2OOR3 CH2OH Triglyceride 3 Methanols Biodiesel Glycerin R1, R2, and R3: fatty acid alkyl groups The fatty acids involved determine the final properties of the biodiesel

  29. Transesterification & Refining Transesterification from vegetable oil or grease: • Soy oil from soy bean • Palm oil from palm fruit • Recycled grease from restaurant and cooking grease 100 kg of oil or fat are reacted with 10 kg of a short-chain alcohol (usually methanol) with a catalyst to form 100 kg of biodiesel and 10 kg of glycerin. Refining based on the separation process of components with different boiling points and physical properties. Physical refining to remove impurities to the desired level , distillation to provide constant purity of product Soybean-biodiesel produces a 93 % energy gain vs. 25 % for corn-ethanol.

  30. Black and blue: bestcountries with potential for economic biofuelsCredit: University of Wisconsin, Madison • The top-five potential producers, Malaysia, Indonesia, Argentina, the United States and Brazil, account for over 80 percent of that total.

  31. The final product

  32. Which producers are involved? Biodiesel Bioethanol

  33. Conclusion • High crude oil prices and government subsidies and policies have driven the increased global demand for using palm oil to create biofuels. • Biofuels can play a role in meeting global energy needs, but should be balanced with the critical needs of providing food for a growing global population. • Technology can and must be a source and a mean to prevent competition between Food and Energy. • Food products produced for the local market can differ per region. • Global products are mostly exactly the same wherever they are produced.

  34. (Industrial) Partners of The Hague University

  35. THANK YOU! Terima kasih

  36. The Hague University Academy for Technology, Innovation & Society, Den Haag Process & Food Technology pft@hhs.nl www.thehagueuniversity.nl

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