Improving the Safety and Quality of Nuts (Woodhead Publishing Series in Food Science, Technology and Nutrition)

Improving the Safety and Quality of Nuts (Woodhead Publishing Series in Food Science, Technology and Nutrition)

by Linda Harris (Editor), Linda Harris (Author)

Synopsis

As tree nuts and peanuts become increasingly recognised for their health-promoting properties, the provision of safe, high quality nuts is a growing concern. Improving the safety and quality of nuts reviews key aspects of nut safety and quality management. Part one explores production and processing practices and their influence on nut contaminants. Chapters discuss agricultural practices to reduce microbial contamination of nuts, pest control in postharvest nuts, and the impact of nut postharvest handling, de-shelling, drying and storage on quality. Further chapters review the validation of processes for reducing the microbial load on nuts and integrating Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) and Statistical Process Control (SPC) for safer nut processing. Chapters in part two focus on improving nut quality and safety and highlight oxidative rancidity in nuts, the impact of roasting on nut quality, and advances in automated nut sorting. Final chapters explore the safety and quality of a variety of nuts including almonds, macadamia nuts, pecans, peanuts, pistachios and walnuts. Improving the safety and quality of nuts is a comprehensive resource for food safety, product development and QA professionals using nuts in foods, those involved in nut growing, nut handling and nut processing, and researchers in food science and horticulture departments interested in the area.

$167.63

Save:$52.72 (24%)

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 440
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Woodhead Publishing Ltd
Published: 25 Sep 2013

ISBN 10: 0857092669
ISBN 13: 9780857092663

Media Reviews
Horticulturalists, food scientists, biochemists, and others review the essential aspects of safety and quality management in tree nuts and peanuts, focusing in particular on microbial safety and on problematic contaminants such as mycotoxins that have recently been associated with nuts. Among the topics are agricultural practices to reduce microbial contamination, pest control in post-harvest nuts,... --ProtoView.com, February 2014
Author Bio
Dr Linda Harris is a Specialist in Microbial Food Safety at the Department of Food Science and Technology, UC Davis, USA.