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Drying Technology
An International Journal
Volume 22, 2004 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

Drying Foodstuffs with Superheated Steam

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Pages 899-916 | Published online: 06 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

A thin-layer superheated steam drier was constructed with the objective of determining the drying characteristics, drying rates, and the effect of superheated steam on product quality in thin-layers. Results from superheated steam drying experiments with sugar-beet pulp, potatoes, Asian noodles, and spent grains indicate that drying times and rates increase with increasing steam temperature. For sugar-beet pulp it was also found that these changes were more significant than increases seen by hot-air drying under the same conditions and that drying rates were not affected by velocity for hot air but were increased for superheated steam. When quality aspects were examined, superheated steam dried Asian noodles saw both beneficial changes to recovery, adhesiveness, and gumminess while parameters of maximum cutting stress, resistance to compression, and surface firmness saw deleterious effects. Spent grains saw high levels of starch gelatinization and retention of fibre content.

#Keynote lecture at PRES'03, Session PRS 09.

Notes

#Keynote lecture at PRES'03, Session PRS 09.

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