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Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing |  | Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing: Encyclopedia II - Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing |  | Since the Industrial Revolution some two hundred years ago, the food processing industry has invented many technologies that both help keep foods fresh longer and alter the fresh state of food as they appear in nature. Cooling is the primary technology that can help maintain freshness, whereas many more technologies have been invented to allow foods to last longer without becoming spoiled. These latter technologies include pasteurisation, autoclavation, drying, salting, and separation of various components, and all appear to alter the origin ...
See also:Nutrition, Nutrition - Overview, Nutrition - History, Nutrition - Nutrition and health, Nutrition - Essential and non-essential amino acids, Nutrition - Vitamins, Nutrition - Fatty acids, Nutrition - Sugar, Nutrition - Intestinal bacterial flora, Nutrition - Nutrition and sports, Nutrition - Nutrition and longevity, Nutrition - Calorie restriction, Nutrition - The French paradox, Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing, Nutrition - Policy advice and guidance on nutrition, Nutrition - Issues, Nutrition - The FPS |  | | Nutrition, Nutrition - Calorie restriction, Nutrition - Essential and non-essential amino acids, Nutrition - Fatty acids, Nutrition - History, Nutrition - Intestinal bacterial flora, Nutrition - Issues, Nutrition - Nutrition and health, Nutrition - Nutrition and longevity, Nutrition - Nutrition and sports, Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing, Nutrition - Overview, Nutrition - Policy advice and guidance on nutrition, Nutrition - Sugar, Nutrition - The FPS, Nutrition - The French paradox, Nutrition - Vitamins, Famine, Fast food, Slow Food, Vegetarianism, Paleolithic diet, Weston A. Price Foundation |  | |
|  |  | Nutrition: Encyclopedia II - Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing
Nutrition - Nutrition industry and food processing
Since the Industrial Revolution some two hundred years ago, the food processing industry has invented many technologies that both help keep foods fresh longer and alter the fresh state of food as they appear in nature. Cooling is the primary technology that can help maintain freshness, whereas many more technologies have been invented to allow foods to last longer without becoming spoiled. These latter technologies include pasteurisation, autoclavation, drying, salting, and separation of various components, and all appear to alter the original nutritional contents of food. Pasteurisation and autoclavation (heating techniques) have no doubt improved the safety of many common foods, preventing epidemics of bacterial infection. But some of the (new) food processing technologies undoubtedly have downfalls as well.
Modern separation techniques such as milling, centrifugation, and pressing have enabled upconcentration of particular components of food, yielding flour, oils, juices and so on, and even separate fatty acids, amino acids, vitamins, and minerals. Inevitably, such large scale upconcentration changes the nutritional content of food, saving certain nutrients while removing others. Heating techniques may also reduce food's content of many heat-labile nutrients such as certain vitamins and phytochemicals, and possibly other yet to be discovered substances. Because of reduced nutritional value, processed foods are often 'enriched' or 'fortified' with some of the most critical nutrients (usually certain vitamins) that were lost during processing. Nonetheless, processed foods tend to have an inferior nutritional profile than do whole, fresh foods, regarding content of both sugar and high GI starches, potassium/sodium, vitamins, fibre, and of intact, unoxidized (essential) fatty acids. In addition, processed foods often contain potentially harmful substances such as oxidized fats and trans fatty acids.
A dramatic example of the effect of food processing on a population's health is the history of epidemics of beri-beri in people subsisting on polished rice. Removing the outer layer of rice by polishing it removes with it the essential vitamin thiamine, causing beri-beri. Another example is the development of scurvy among infants in the late 1800's in the United States. It turned out that the vast majority of sufferers were being fed milk that had been heat-treated (as suggested by Pasteur) to control bacterial disease. Pasteurisation was effective against bacteria, but it destroyed the vitamin C.
As mentioned, lifestyle- and obesity-related diseases are becoming increasingly prevalent all around the world. There is little doubt that the increasingly widespread application of some modern food processing technologies has contributed to this development. The food processing industry is a major part of modern economy, and as such it is influential in political decisions (e.g. nutritional recommendations, agricultural subsidising). In any known profit-driven economy, health considerations are hardly a priority; effective production of cheap foods with a long shelf-life is more the trend. In general, whole, fresh foods have a relatively short shelf-life and are less profitable to produce and sell than are more processed foods. Thus the consumer is left with the choice between more expensive but nutritionally superior whole, fresh foods, and cheap, usually nutritionally inferior processed foods. Because processed foods are often cheaper, more convenient (in both purchasing, storage, and preparation), and more available, the consumption of nutritionally inferior foods has been increasing throughout the world along with many nutrition-related health complications.
Other related archivesAntioxidants, Auxology, Beta-carotene, Caloric restriction, Cells, China project, DNA, Digestion, Eating disorders, Enzyme, Essential amino acid, Essential fatty acid, FDA, Famine, Fast food, French paradox, Glycemic Index, Health, Healthy eating, Illnesses related to poor nutrition, Important publications in nutrition, Industrial Revolution, Living foods diet, Mineral, Natural Hygiene, Obesity, PCBs, Paleolithic diet, Pasteur, Phytochemicals, RNA, Slow Food, UVB radiation, Vegetarianism, Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Vitamin D, Vitamin K, Weston A. Price Foundation, aging, amino acids, antibiotics, antioxidant, beri-beri, blood pressure, blood sugar, bloodstream, butterfly effect, calcium, caloric restriction, carbohydrates, carbon, carnitine, cells, centrifugation, chemical, chemical bonds, chemical compounds, cholesterol, choline, clot, conformation, creatine, cultural bias, diet, digestion, digestive system, dioxins, disease, drying, eating disorders, eicosanoids, eicosapentaenoic acid, electrolytes, elements, enzymes, essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, experimentation, famine, fat-soluble, fatty acids, feces, fertilizers, food energy, food pyramid, free radicals, genetic engineering, glucagon, glutathione, glycemic load, goitre, health, homeostasis, hormones, human body, hydrogen, hydroxyapatite, hyperinsulinemia, hypothalamus, immune system, inflammation, ingestion, insulin, insulin resistance, iron, lead, leptin, linoleic acid, linolenic acid, lipids, longevity, lumen, malnutrition, mandatory labelling, mercury, metabolic syndrome, metabolism, milling, minerals, mitosis, mutation, nitrogen, nucleic acids, nutritional supplements, obesity, omega-3, omega-6, organic farming, osteoporosis, oxygen, pasteurisation, pesticides, phenotype, phospholipids, phosphorus, phytochemical, phytochemicals, politics, polyunsaturated fatty acids, potassium, poverty, precursors, pressing, prostaglandins, proteins, psychological health, salting, salts, scientifically, scurvy, sodium, starvation, substrates, sugars, sunlight, technologies, thiamine, tocopherol, tocotrienol, toxic, triglycerides, type 2 diabetes, variables, vitamin, vitamin D, vitamins, water, zinc
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Nutrition industry and food processing", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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