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This book reviews the growing variety of foods now used entirely or in part as snacks, with special emphasis on those consumed in the United States and the United Kingdom. Food-industry specialists address all major areas of the snack-food industry: product development, assembly of raw materials, storage, processing, packaging, and consumption. The book includes definitions of snack foods, their distinct characteristics, latest product concepts and production techniques, and new data on the nutritional impact of snack.
Rather than containing for the most part fairly detailed food science and technology intended for daily use and reference by food scientists and technologists, this book is designed for use by a much wider range of readers concerned with a particular and rapidly expanding area of food production, promotion, marketing, and packaging. A certain amount of basic detail is provided to enable relatively rough estimates of the production methods and packaging facilities necessary to enable new or improved items to be made, but the overall emphasis is on the wide range of food products that can now quite legitimately be regarded as coming within the broad definition of foods used as snacks, as contrasted with main meals. Thus, we start with the basic requirements to be met in a snack food whatever its nature, and follow with the great variety of items nowadays used 3..'l snacks or as adjuvants to snacks, concluding with an assessment of nutritional consequences of the growth of "snacking" or "browsing," and with the special packaging requirements of snack foods.
The need for a further edition of a book is gratifying for contributors and editor alike. When faced with the corresponding challenge to identify what has changed in one sector of a particular industry, however, initial enthusiasm frequently declines. Nowhere is this more evident than in this book on food flavourings, because the industry still remains the tantalising blend of art, science and technology that was alluded to in the first edition. Instrumentation and analytical skills can now identify flavour components down to nanogram and picogram concentrations and yet the skilled flavourist is often still able to defeat this scientific ability. Many parts of the food industry, and in parti...
Rules -- Meat -- Slaughter -- Intoxicants -- Business -- Standards -- Manufactured products -- Wholesome -- Cuisine -- Eating out
Covers sugar manufacturing from both beet and cane plants and sugar utilization in dairy products, breakfast cereals, beverages, preserves and jellies, confectionery, processed foods, and microwave oven products. Also discusses non-food applications of sugar, its general properties, and the impact of sugar on human health. Includes a listing of the industry's American and Canadian companies and important associations world-wide. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cooking for the year 2002. The subject is The Fat of the Land.