Method and apparatus for infusing fruit

Food or edible material: processes – compositions – and products – Products per se – or processes of preparing or treating... – Plant material is basic ingredient other than extract,...

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426293, 426310, 426425, 426426, 426429, 426489, 426573, 426577, 426615, 426658, 99487, 99516, A23B 708, A23B 7158

Patent

active

061595276

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates generally to a method and apparatus for infusing fruit, and more particularly to such a method and apparatus wherein there is a substantial juice byproduct and the fruit does not appear to have been dehydrated during processing, the fruit having the characteristics of juiciness and sweetness.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

U.S. Pat. No. 4,626,434, assigned to Rich Products, relates to a single step process for infusing fruit. In this process the fruit is placed into a 70% fructose syrup bath maintained at a temperature of approximately 65-71.degree. C. (150-160.degree. F.). (It is possible to use sucrose, which is a disaccharide consisting of fructose and glucose chemically bonded together. During processing the sucrose will be "inverted", i.e., the bond will be shattered and the sucrose will end up as fructose and glucose.) In the sugar syrup bath a portion of the fruit juice (water and aromatics) within the fruit will pass through the outer membranes of the fruit osmotically, and as the water tends to dilute the sugar syrup, the sugar syrup will be maintained at or near its initial sugar percentage by introducing concentrated sugar syrups. During this time equal amounts of diluted syrup are withdrawn and subsequently treated, the final byproduct being a sugar syrup which is reintroduced into the bath. The disadvantage of the Rich Products process is that the water goes out of the fruit faster than the sugar goes in, causing osmotic dehydration of the fruit. Once the fruit is osmotically dehydrated, it cannot be "plumped up," i.e., re-infused with a plumping liquid so that it does not appear to be dehydrated. In addition, there are no juice by-products. The juice is irretrievably mixed with the syrup.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,320,861, assigned to Ocean Spray, discloses a two step process for infusing fruit. In the first step a decharacterized fruit product is produced by a countercurrent "leaching" process. In the countercurrent process up to 94% of the fruit juice content is extracted and is replaced by water. This process does not cause osmotic dehydration as the osmotic transfer rates of the water and fruit juices are substantially the same. The decharacterized fruit is substantially nothing more than cellulose and water. The byproduct of this process is 3% fruit juice, which can be changed by evaporation to 8%. The second step of the process also uses a countercurrent process, the apparatus being substantially identical to that used in the first step of the process. During the second step an aqueous blend (or liquor) of sucrose and cranberry fruit juice components (or other equivalent fruit components) is used to infuse the decharacterized fruit. In addition, fruit flavorings and food colorings must be added to the infusing liquor used in the second step of the process in order to make the infused fruit resemble a cranberry. The result is a new fruit product in the way of infused cranberry having the sweetened flavor of the infusing liquor and cranberry juice. The resultant fruit product is dried and optimally has a sugar to water by weight ratio of about 70%. This sugar to water weight ratio is commonly referred to as Brix in the industry, and this term will be used in the remained of this specification. The disadvantage of this process is that the augers used by the countercurrent process is rough on soft or fragile fruit, causing too many undesirable fines. In addition, as water is extracted from the cranberries during the second step, the water will dilute the infusing liquor, and the augers cause mixing of dilute infusing liquor with the initial concentrated infusing liquor.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,785,071 to Mathews teaches infusing previously extracted fruit by moving a sugar front through the previously extracted fruit, the front having a sugar content beginning at zero and increasing in sugar content as the front is passed by the layers of fruit. In order to properly infuse the fruit according to the Mathews patent, a pretreatment process must be followed to prep

REFERENCES:
patent: 1534050 (1925-04-01), Barrielle
patent: 1717258 (1929-06-01), Rambaud
patent: 1906295 (1933-05-01), Wickenden
patent: 2785071 (1957-03-01), Mathews
patent: 3032419 (1962-05-01), Limpert
patent: 4350711 (1982-09-01), Kahn et al.
patent: 4626434 (1986-12-01), O'Mahony et al.
patent: 4713252 (1987-12-01), Ishmail
patent: 4892665 (1990-01-01), Wettlaufer
patent: 5275097 (1994-01-01), Wettlaufer
patent: 5320861 (1994-06-01), Mantius et al.
John T. Nickerson & Anthony J. Sinskey Microbiology of Foods and Food Processing 1972, pp. 71-83, American Elsevier Publishing Company, New York NY.

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