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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Manufacturing industries > Food manufacturing & related industries
"He either enchants or antagonizes everyone he meets. But even his enemies agree there are three things Ray Kroc does damned well: sell hamburgers, make money, and tell stories." --from Grinding It Out
Few entrepreneurs can claim to have radically changed the way we live, and Ray Kroc is one of them. His revolutions in food-service automation, franchising, shared national training, and advertising have earned him a place beside the men and women who have founded not only businesses, but entire empires. But even more interesting than Ray Kroc the business man is Ray Kroc the man. Not your typical self-made tycoon, Kroc was fifty-two years old when he opened his first franchise. In Grinding It Out, you'll meet the man behind McDonald's, one of the largest fast-food corporations in the world with over 32,000 stores around the globe.
Irrepressible enthusiast, intuitive people person, and born storyteller, Kroc will fascinate and inspire you on every page.
The role of the Maillard reaction in forming flavors from amino
acid and sugar precursors has been studied for many years. To
establish the basic chemistry of the reaction, researchers have
used model systems, often solutions of a single amino acid with a
single sugar. Despite the apparent simplicity of the system,
heating such a solution can generate tens if not hundreds of
compounds, which requires careful and time-consuming analysis to
identify and quantify each component.
Data from the model systems has allowed researchers to study the
pathways that lead to flavor formation, and various schemes have
been proposed to identify the main "routes" that lead to flavor
compounds. Such schemes have led to one of the main control
principles, namely an understanding of the role of amino acids in
forming some characteristic aromas, e.g., bread flavor from
proline, as well as an appreciation of the role of C5 and C6 sugars
in controlling the rate of reaction.
Recently, the formation of taste compounds through the Maillard
reaction has been investigated and new potent compounds have been
discovered that can contribute to the overall flavor formed during
the Maillard reaction. These findings also offer the potential for
control and manipulation of the Maillard reaction to form specific
types of flavor. Although the nature of the end-products of the
Maillard reaction in both food and model systems are well
documented, applying these principles to control flavor formation
in real foods has proved difficult.
This book describes recent research and developments related to the
control of the Maillard reaction to give optimum flavor quality.
These include kinetic modeling of the reaction, the effect of
physical parameters (temperature, time, moisture content, pH), and
the effect of chemical parameters (amino acid and sugar
composition, the presence of other components). The topics covered
relate to real food systems and reaction product flavorings, as
well as model systems. Contributors from academia and industry have
come together to provide an up to date overview of progress in this
important area of flavor research.
Meat is both a major food in its own right and a staple ingredient
in many food products. With its distinguished editors and an
international team of contributors, Meat processing reviews
research on what defines and determines meat quality, and how it
can be maintained or improved during processing.
Part one considers the various aspects of meat quality. There are
chapters on what determines the quality of raw meat, changing views
of the nutritional quality of meat and the factors determining such
quality attributes as colour and flavour. Part two discusses how
these aspects of quality are measured, beginning with the
identification of appropriate quality indicators. It also includes
chapters on both sensory analysis and instrumental methods
including on-line monitoring and microbiological analysis. Part
three reviews the range of processing techniques that have been
deployed at various stages in the supply chain. Chapters include
the use of modelling techniques to improve quality and productivity
in beef cattle production, new decontamination techniques after
slaughter, automation of carcass processing, high pressure
processing of meat, developments in modified atmosphere packaging
and chilling and freezing. There are also chapters on particular
products such as restructured meat and fermented meat products.
With its detailed and comprehensive coverage of what defines and
determines meat quality, Meat processing is a standard reference
for all those involved in the meat industry and meat research.
Reviews research on what defines and determines meat quality, and
how it can be measured, maintained and improved during
processingExamines the range of processing techniques that have
been deployed at various stages in the supply chainComprehensively
outlines the new decontamination techniques after slaughter and
automation of carcass processing
Food quality has traditionally been assessed in terms of
wholesomeness, acceptability and adulteration. Yet, this
traditional methodology for food analysis has increasingly proved
to be inadequate. During the recent past
however, new analytical approaches used to assess the quality of
foods have been emerging - work on chemotaxonomy has gained
momentum, new molecules in the plant kingdom have been discovered,
and there have been many advances in molecular biology and
genetics.
As well as comparing and evaluating indices used to assess quality
of foods, Handbook of Indices of Food Quality and Authenticity
surveys the emerging techniques and methods that are currently
opening up to the analyst. The book discusses the potential of
these novel approaches which are sure to help in solving the new
problems the food scientist is likely to face in the future.
As a detailed study of current methodologies and indicesof food
quality, this book is an essential reference work for industry and
an indispensable guide for the research worker, food scientist and
food analyst. It will serve as a valuable tool for those analysts
facing the challenge of applying known methods to unorthodox
formulations and
developing new or improved methods for quality evaluation.
This book is an invaluable introduction to the physical properties
of foods and the physics involved in food processing. It provides
descriptions and data that are needed for selecting the most
appropriate equipment in food technology and for making food
processing calculations.
This ACS Symposium Series book evolved from the ACS symposium "Food
Additives and Packaging" sponsored by the Division of Agricultural
and Food Chemistry (AGFD) at the 245th ACS National Meeting &
Exposition in New Orleans, LA, April 7-11, 2013. The book helps
readers understand the rules and regulations governing the use of
food additives and food packaging materials in the U.S. and
globally. Furthermore, the book investigates novel materials and
applications related to food additives and food packaging materials
and explores concerns, issues, and current events in the field. The
book particularly highlights global regulations, research,
development, applications, and evaluation of food additives and
food packaging materials. These areas are dynamic, constantly
changing, and expected to attract the interest of a broad and
diverse readership. Part I of this book highlights how food
additives and packaging materials are classified and regulated in
different parts of the world and addresses some of the scientific,
legal, and practical issues related to these regulations from the
perspective representatives. It contains monographs on general
aspects of regulatory processes in various countries (U.S., EU,
Thailand and Japan) and specific aspects, such as GRAS substances,
color additives, enzymes, flavorings, safety assessments, and the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Part II presents some
current topics related to the research, development, applications,
and evaluation of food additives and food packaging materials, with
monographs on applying regulatory knowledge for packaging
compliance and evaluating food packaging for pre-packaged
irradiated food, and on various emerging technologies, such as a
control release packaging system and high pressure processing that
can improve the appearance, texture, taste, or shelf-life of food;
it also includes monographs that discuss other aspects, such as
bisphenol A, PET packaging materials, nanomaterials, and
biomaterials.
The foodservice industry is a fundamental part of the hospitality
and tourism industries, and contributes to essential guest
experiences and the meeting of guests' expectations of service
excellence. It encompasses all operations involved in preparing and
serving food and beverages to customers away from their homes.
Understanding the fundamental components of foodservice management
will enhance capabilities and ensure business success. Foodservice
management: an African perspective offers an in-depth analysis of
the integrated complexities of various types of food and beverage
service organisation. Foodservice management: an African
perspective provides an overview of the foodservice industry before
addressing the organising and control functions, then progresses to
the more strategic aspects. Foodservice management: an African
perspective is aimed at students studying towards a qualification
in the fields of hospitality, culinary, food and beverage or
consumer sciences at either higher certificate, diploma or
bachelor's level. This textbook is also suitable for courses in
foodservice management at TVET colleges. Susina Jooste has over 20
years of experience in higher education and programme development
for culinary and hospitality specialisation. She has previously
been the owner and director of a private higher education
institution which offered qualifications in hospitality and events
management, and in hospitality education. She currently serves as
research and development specialist at the NID Training NPC and is
a director of the South African Culinary and Hospitality Educators
Forum.
Over the past century, new farming methods, feed additives, and
social and economic structures have radically transformed
agriculture around the globe, often at the expense of human health.
In Chickenizing Farms and Food, Ellen K. Silbergeld reveals the
unsafe world of chickenization-big agriculture's top-down,
contract-based factory farming system-and its negative consequences
for workers, consumers, and the environment. Drawing on her deep
knowledge of and experience in environmental engineering and
toxicology, Silbergeld examines the complex history of the modern
industrial food animal production industry and describes the
widespread effects of Arthur Perdue's remarkable agricultural
innovations, which were so important that the US Department of
Agriculture uses the term chickenization to cover the
transformation of all farm animal production. Silbergeld tells the
real story of how antibiotics were first introduced into animal
feeds in the 1940s, which has led to the emergence of
multi-drug-resistant pathogens, such as MRSA. Along the way, she
talks with poultry growers, farmers, and slaughterhouse workers on
the front lines of exposure, moving from the Chesapeake Bay
peninsula that gave birth to the modern livestock and poultry
industry to North Carolina, Brazil, and China. Arguing that the
agricultural industry is in desperate need of reform, the book
searches through the fog of illusion that obscures most of what has
happened to agriculture in the twentieth century and untangles the
history of how laws, regulations, and policies have stripped
government agencies of the power to protect workers and consumers
alike from occupational and food-borne hazards. Chickenizing Farms
and Food also explores the limits of some popular alternatives to
industrial farming, including organic production, nonmeat diets,
locavorism, and small-scale agriculture. Silbergeld's provocative
but pragmatic call to action is tempered by real challenges: how
can we ensure a safe and accessible food system that can feed
everyone, including consumers in developing countries with new
tastes for western diets, without hurting workers, sickening
consumers, and undermining some of our most powerful medicines?
"Warning. Smoking Kills!" It also corrupts law enforcement officials and eviscerates state institutions. It devours politicians, professionals, business people and ordinary workers in the chase for big bucks and the battle for a slice of an ever-shrinking cigarette market.
Join one of South Africa's former tax sleuths, Johann van Loggerenberg, in a wild ride through the double-dealing world of tobacco's colourful characters and ruthless corporates. Meet the femme fatales, mavericks, mercenaries and grandmasters, and learn how the crime-busting unit led by van Loggerenberg at SARS and its "Project Honey Badger" became a victim of war between industry players and a high-stakes political game driven by state capture.
This is the tale of a few good men and women who dared to try to hold to account a billion-dollar international industry rife with private spy networks, tax evasion, collusion and corruption - ultimately at great cost to themselves and South Africa.
A clear and lively account of the machinery, innovation and
personalities that have shaped the industry that provides the
all-essential daily bread. Indispensible for anyone with an
interest in industrial history. There is a wealth of literature on
the traditional flour milling industry, much of it concerned with
the charms of rural settings and ancient crafts, whereas the
history of the dramatic changes in milling methods from the 1870s
onwards has been somewhat neglected. Written by Glyn Jones,
engineer and lecturer in technology, `The Millers' sets out to
redress the balance and tells the story of the transformation of
the flour milling industry by men of vision with enterprise and
engineering skill, from the first experiments with roller mills
before 1880 to the sleek, automated flour mills operating at the
end of the twentieth century. It is a story of technological
endeavour and industrial success. The innovations were
revolutionary, with roller mills, purifiers and a variety of
sifting and sorting machines replacing millstones and crude sieving
equipment. Change was propelled by an increasing demand for white
bread, and whiter flour could be produced by roller milling of hard
foreign wheats, whereas traditional millstone methods were not
suitable for the production of large quantities of branless flour.
Henry Simon, who became the pioneering leader of the new field of
milling engineering, installed his first roller plant in Manchester
in 1878; by 1887 mills on the Simon system could produce enough
flour to meet the requirements of 11 million people. The mass
production of flour for our daily bread began in earnest. From
1904, the most forceful innovator among British millers was Joseph
Rank, who commissioned Henry Simon Ltd to supply new plants at the
main ports of Hull, London, Cardiff and Liverpool. The roles played
by the other leading millers, many of which are still household
names, are also included in this account. Despite the hugely
impressive and far-reaching technological advances made by British
millers and milling engineers, they have not received the credit
they deserve. In truth, they replaced the traditional, basic form
of the industry rapidly and effectively, and their inventions
transformed milling in Britain and further afield. `The Millers'
describes, in a clear and lively way, not only the changes in
machinery and processing and the effects on the traditional
industry, but the personalities who shaped the trade and the
companies they ran, and the myths and legends which have surrounded
them. Modern mills, rooted in British innovation and enterprise,
are impressive in appearance and striking inside, with machinery
that looks smart and is automatically controlled, processing wheat
for a range of attractive foods and for the still essential daily
bread.
Large-scale adverse health and developmental outcomes related to
tobacco affect millions of people across the world, raising serious
questions from a human rights perspective. In response to this
crisis, this timely book provides a comprehensive analysis of the
promotion and enforcement of human rights protection in tobacco
control law and policy at international, regional, and domestic
levels. This thought-provoking book offers significant new insights
to the topic, laying the foundations for a human rights based
approach to tobacco control. Addressing the function of law as a
tool to help combat one of the major public health challenges
facing society, contributions by global scholars rebut human rights
claims presented by the tobacco industry. Emphasis is instead
placed upon the human rights of vulnerable individuals, children in
particular, as a result of smoking and exposure to second-hand
smoke. Illustrating ways in which the right to health can be
advanced with regards to tobacco control, smoking and the use of
e-cigarettes, this important book will be a vital resource for
human rights and health law scholars and practitioners as well as
policy makers in public health law. Contributors include: D.
Barrett, D. Beyleveld, O.A. Cabrera, A. Constantin A. Garde, M.E.
Gispen, L. Gruszczynski, J. Hannah, S. Karjalainen, L. Lane, S.
Lierman, A.L. McCarthy, A. Mitchell, S. Negri, O. Nnamuchi, M.
Roberts, A. Schmidt, M. Sormunen, A. Taylor, B. Toebes, M. van
Westendorp, Y. Zhang
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Illuminating the
global food system as a highly dynamic set of interconnecting
interests and sub-systems that drives rapid technological,
societal, and cultural change, this cutting-edge Research Agenda
examines the pressing issues that confront food systems, and the
emerging responses to them. Chapters from internationally renowned
specialists address the pressing issues facing food systems,
including the growing concentration and power of large agri-food
corporations, the contribution of food production to climate
breakdown, the exploitation of agricultural labour, food poverty,
and the reconfiguration of animal bodies. Reviewing possible
'solutions' chapters then examine the potential for a digital
agricultural revolution, the contribution of alternative proteins
in dietary change, and the emergence of regionalized and
regenerative food systems. The book concludes with a look towards
hybrid foodscapes, exploring how design can help us to re-imagine
our stake in food systems of the future. Interdisciplinary,
holistic, and accessible in its approach, this innovative book will
prove vital to students and scholars engaged in the study of food -
from production to consumption - as well as those concerned with
policymaking in the fields of public health and nutrition, food
governance, sustainability, and environmental advocacy.
"These case stories focus on an important event, mishap, management
practice, or ethical question, and present important lessons to the
reader. Their objective is to educate, inspire, motivate,
challenge, and encourage food professionals to better understand
food safety management and to help increase job effectiveness and
productivity with ethics and integrity. Each case addresses its
subject in terms of relevance and application to food safety and
covers all types of risks (e.g., microbial, chemical, physical)
associated with each step of the food chain. In an engaging format,
the book provides an analysis of incidents or near misses. It
highlights pitfalls in food safety management and provides key
insight into the means of avoiding them. The book captures the
real-life experience of food safety professionals around the world
in very challenging situations, and invites the reader to reflect
on and discuss the situations depicted. It is an essential
reference for students and food professionals, including
scientists, managers, trainers, food inspectors, public health
officials, and more. Each of the 87 short cases includes a
paragraph on "Discussion and key learnings", which will appeal
equally to educators, students and working professionals in this
field."
Bread Making: Improving Quality quickly established itself as an
essential purchase for baking professionals and researchers in this
area. Fully revised and updated and with new chapters on Flour
Lipids, and the dietary and nutritional quality of bread, this new
edition provides readers with the information they need on the
latest developments in bread making science and practice The book
opens with two introductory chapters providing an overview of the
breadmaking process. Part one focuses on the impacts of wheat and
flour quality on bread, covering topics such as wheat chemistry,
wheat starch structure, grain quality assessment, milling and wheat
breeding. Part two covers dough development and bread ingredients,
with chapters on dough aeration and rheology, the use of redox
agents and enzymes in breadmaking and water control, among other
topics. In part three, the focus shifts to bread sensory quality,
shelf life and safety. Topics covered include bread aroma, staling
and contamination. Finally, part four looks at particular bread
products such as high fiber breads, those made from partially baked
and frozen dough and those made from non-wheat flours With its
distinguished editor and international team of contributors, Bread
Making: Improving Quality, Third Edition, continues to serve as the
standard reference for researchers and professionals in the bread
industry and all those involved in academic research on breadmaking
science and practice.
Farming – whether domestic crops, forestry, fish or livestock –
is one of the pillars of human civilization, dating back to the
early settlements of Neolithic times. Today, approximately one
billion people work the land, providing food and other products for
our ever-increasing human population. Arranged geographically,
Farming explores the many types of farm and farming that exist
today. See how farmers in Malaysia extract milky latex from the
bark of rubber trees, used to make everything from protective
gloves to vehicle tires; be amazed at the gorgeous stepped rice
fields of Bali, where the traditional subak irrigation system is
created around ‘water temples’ and managed by Hindu priests;
marvel at the vast corn and soya bean fields of Ontario, much of it
used for animal feed to support Canada’s beef industry; learn
about nomadic pastoralism in low rainfall areas such as Somalia,
where herders move camels, cattle, sheep and goats in search of
grazing; explore the wineries and vineyards in Bordeaux, where more
than 700 million bottles of wine are produced each year by more
than 8,500 châteaux; and see how freshwater prawns are harvested
for export in the watery deltas of Bangladesh. Presented in a
landscape format and with more than 180 outstanding photographs of
farming from every part of the planet, Farming offers a pictorial
celebration of mankind’s deep connection with the land that
sustains us.
This is an invaluable piece of work that, to my knowledge, is not
replicated anywhere, even in piecemeal fashion. It should be read
by everyone having a stake in the Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP) negotiations. It fills an historical
vacuum in US-EU agricultural trade relationships that has existed
for decades. This book provides the context of the past half
century, and it will be invaluable for another half century.' -
Clayton Yeutter, Former US Trade Representative, Former US
Secretary of Agriculture and Senior Advisor at Hogan Lovells, US
Tim Josling and Stefan Tangermann's Transatlantic Food and
Agricultural Trade Policy traces the past fifty years of
transatlantic trade relations in the area of food and agricultural
policy, from early skirmishes over farm policies to on-going
conflicts over biotech foods and hormone use in animal rearing. The
authors take an analytical approach to the causes of transatlantic
conflict and the extent to which these trade tensions in
agricultural markets have reflected wide differences in policy
approaches and levels of support. They explore the role played by
international rules, in the GATT, and subsequently the WTO, in
disciplining farm price support policies to allow for more open
markets. The book also points to possible ways to end five decades
of transatlantic trade tensions in the area of food and farm
products. Scholars, practitioners and policymakers will find this
timely book an invaluable and comprehensive guide to the causes of,
and solutions to, the persistent EU-US trade conflicts in
agricultural and food policy.
Food Quality and Shelf Life covers all aspects and challenges of
food preservation, packaging and shelf-life. It provides
information on the most important pillars in the field, starting
with active and smart packaging materials, novel technologies, and
control tools in all stages between production and consumer. The
book gives emphasis to methodological approaches for sensory
shelf-life estimation and the impact of packaging on sensorial
properties. Researchers and professionals alike will find this
reference useful, especially those who are interested in the
performance evaluation of future packaging for fresh produce in the
cold chain and temperature management in the supply chain.
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