4.5 Article

Dust formation in French fries

Journal

CURRENT RESEARCH IN FOOD SCIENCE
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.crfs.2023.100466

Keywords

Freezing; Frying; Stress; Fracturing

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In this study, dust formation in the industrial processing of frozen french fries is analyzed, and its similarities with flaking in par-baked french baguettes are identified. The amount of dust is non-linearly correlated with the moisture content of the crust and the freezing rate. Furthermore, the dust decreases with the increase of frozen storage time, explained by viscoelastic relaxation of locked-in stress mediated by moisture migration. Industry can potentially control the dust problem, but trade-offs with other objectives need to be considered.
In this study we report on the analysis of dust formation, a quality problem arising in the industrial processing of par-fried, frozen french fries. This dust constitutes fractured pieces broken off the crust during finish frying. We claim that this dust problem has many similarities with flaking arising during the final-baking of par-baked french baguettes, i.e. the two problems are governed by the same physical principles. Inspired by the hypotheses behind flaking, we have made an experimental design, where we have perturbed the operating conditions of an industrial processing line of french fries. The measured dust during finish frying is correlated with the physical properties of the crust, measured in the different unit operations of the industrial processing line, and the operating conditions. We have shown that dust is non-linearly correlated to 1) the moisture content of the crust as influenced by drying and par-frying, and 2) the freezing rate in the industrial tunnel freezer. Remarkably, the amount of dust decrease with the increase of frozen storage time, which we have explained via viscoelastic relaxation of locked-in stress - mediated by moisture migrating from core to crust. This decay is shown to be independent of pretreatments, which only determines its starting value. With the given relations industry can in principle control the dust problem, but these measures have to be weighed against their effects on other objectives of the industry.

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