FORCED-CONVECTION, STEAM-HEATING OF NUTS WITH PREHEATING
20170127715 ยท 2017-05-11
Inventors
- Joseph F. Kovacs (New Orleans, LA, US)
- James M. Lapeyre, III (New Orleans, LA, US)
- Michael V. Sclafini (New Orleans, LA, US)
Cpc classification
A23B2/42
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A23B7/0053
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A23L11/01
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A23N12/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A23V2002/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
Method for pasteurizing almonds and other nuts with steam at atmospheric pressure. The amount of condensation on and the consequent water uptake of nuts is limited by pasteurizing the nuts in a heating chamber with a gaseous atmosphere including a steam mixture and forming a forced-convection path through the nuts. The limited water uptake maintains the quality of the nuts. A forced-convection steam cooker conveying food products on a foraminous conveyor belt forces the steam mixture through the nuts. A preheater preheats the nuts so that they can be pasteurized in the steam cooker at a temperature of between 85 C. and 99 C. to reduce the dwell time and increase throughput.
Claims
1. A method for pasteurizing nuts, comprising: conveying nuts along a conveying path through a preheating chamber; conveying the nuts preheated in the preheating chamber along a conveying path through a heating chamber; forcing a substantially homogeneous gaseous atmosphere comprising a steam mixture through the nuts in the heating chamber along a connection path intersecting the conveying path to heat the outer skins of the nuts and limit the amount of water condensation enrobing the nuts; maintaining atmospheric pressure in the heating chamber; controlling the temperature of the gaseous atmosphere in the heating chamber to a heating temperature of greater than 85 C. and less than 99 C. to pasteurize the nuts.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the temperature of the preheating chamber is between about 57 C. and about 85 C.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the dwell time of the nuts in the preheating chamber is between about 1 min and about 6 min.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the preheating chamber preheats the nuts to a surface temperature of between about 38 C. and about 85 C.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the preheating chamber preheats the nuts to a surface temperature below about 70 C.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the preheating chamber preheats the nuts to a surface temperature below the condensation temperature in the heating chamber to ensure that condensation forms on the nut in the heating chamber.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the dwell time of the nuts in the heating chamber is between about 1 min and about 6 min.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the dwell time of the nuts in the heating chamber is 4 min or less.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the preheating chamber is a low-humidity, dry-air preheater maintaining a relative humidity of between 1% and 60%.
10. The method of claim 1 wherein the preheating chamber is a forced-convection steam cooker.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0004] These features and aspects of the invention, as well as its advantages, are described in more detail in the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, in which:
[0005]
[0006]
[0007]
[0008]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0009] A steam cooker that operates according to and embodies features of the invention is shown in
[0010] The cooker shown is modular with at least two identical heating modules 32, 32. More modules may be connected in series to lengthen the total low-temperature heating region. A single module could be used for food products that require only a brief heating time. Each module is individually controlled with its own steam valves. A feedback signal from a temperature-sensing probe 34 in each heating module is used by a controller, such as a programmable logic controller, to control the opening of the steam-injector valve to maintain a predetermined heating temperature in each module. The probe, the controller, and the valve provide a means for maintaining a pre-selected temperature in each module. Air circulators, such as fans 36 or blowers, draw air 37 into the cooker through one of the side walls 38, as also shown in
[0011] In operation, nuts, such as peanuts or almonds and other tree nuts, are conveyed into the steam cooker 14 by the conveyor belt 20 along a conveying path 56. The nuts are heated in a low-temperature cooking region 58 that may include one or more identical forced-convection heating modules 32, 32. Air is drawn into the modules and mixed with steam to form a substantially homogeneous gaseous atmosphere of air (or other gas, such as nitrogen) and steam or water vapor. This steam mixture is circulated by an air circulator, such as a fan, in a convection path that intersects the food product. In this example the convection path is perpendicular to the conveying path 56, but it could intersect or cross the conveying path from other directions. Along with the low-temperature heat treatment, the forced-convection flow through the nuts shears condensation enrobing the nuts and inhibits the uptake of moisture. The duration of the heatingthe dwell timeis set by one or more of: (a) the length of the low-temperature heating region 58, (b) the speed of the conveyor belt 20, (c) the temperature of the heating region, (d) the size and kind of nut, and (e) the thickness of the mat of nuts on the conveyor belt. For almonds, the dwell time may range from 4 to 9 minutes in order to achieve sufficient lethality, e.g., a 6 log reduction in a target organism, such as salmonella. The temperature of the heating region is measured by a temperature probe and controlled by the amount of steam introduced into the cooker in each module.
[0012]
[0013] Low-temperature pasteurization as described is effective in minimizing the deleterious uptake of water by the nuts. But pasteurizing nuts at lower temperatures requires a longer dwell time in the cooker to achieve the desired kill of pathogens. And longer dwell times lower product throughput.
[0014] Preheating nuts in a low-humidity, dry-air preheating chamber 60, or preheater, before they are conveyed into a pasteurizing region 62, as shown in
[0015] Although the preheating chamber 60 has been described as a low-humidity, dry-heat heater, in other versions, the preheating chamber 60 can be a separate forced-convection steam cooker, an additional forced-convection heating module preceding the two modules 32, 32 of