recovery of food waste
TRANSCRIPT
RECOVERY OF USEFUL MATERIALS FROM EFFLUENT BY DIFFERENT
SYSTEMSPresented by : G.kavita
MSc II year
Dept. of Food Science & Nutrition
The utilization and disposal of product specific waste is difficult.
Waste in the food industry is characterized by a high ratio of
product .
Waste disposal and by-product management in food processing
industry pose problems in the areas of environmental protection
and sustainability.
UTILIZATION OF BY-PRODUCTS AND WASTE MATERIALS
FROM MEAT, POULTRY AND FISH PROCESSING INDUSTRIES
Generally speaking, raw and auxiliary materials, as well as
processing acids, enter the production process and exit as one of the
following:
Desired product,
A non-product-specific waste or a product-specific waste-
Unavoidably accumulates as a result of processing of raw materials.
The current methods for further utilization of product-specific waste
have been developed.
Another characteristic of product-specific waste is that the
generated mass of waste relative to production levels .
The disposing of this waste can be difficult for the following
reasons:
Biological stability and the potential growth of pathogens
Many types of waste material either already contain large
numbers of microbes and/or will be altered quickly through
microbial activity.
The breakdown of protein is always characterized by the
evolution of strong odours.
o High water content
o Rapid autoxidation
o Changes due to enzymatic activity
Meat industry
The majority of the waste, in the meat
industry is produced during
slaughtering.
Slaughter house waste consists of the
portion of a slaughtered animal that
cannot be sold as meat or used in meat-
products.
Efficient utilization of meat by product
is important for the profitability of the
meat industry.
By-products in the meat industry and their utilization:
Variety meats are the wholesale edible by-products. They are
segregated, chilled and processed under sanitary conditions.
Meat trimmed from the head is described on edible offal or an
edible by-product.
Edible fats are obtained during slaughter, such as the cowl fat
surrounding the rumen or stomach, or the cutting fat which is back
fat, pork leaf fat or rumen fat.
Usage of meat by-products often requires treatments such as
collection, washing, trimming, chilling, packaging and cooling.
Nutritive value of meat by-products
Edible meat by-products contain many essential nutrients.
Some are used as medicines .
Pork tail has the highest fat content and the lowest moisture
content of all meat by-products.
The amino acid composition of meat by-products is different
from that of lean tissue.
Liver is the best source of niacin, vitamin B12, B6, folacin,
ascorbic acid and vitamin A. Kidney is also a good source of
vitamin B6, B12, and folacin.
Utilization of blood
Animal blood has been used to make blood sausages, blood pudding, biscuits and bread.
It is used in blood curd, blood cake and blood pudding.
It is also used for non-food items such as fertilizer, feedstuffs and binders.
Utilization of glands and organs
Animal organs and glands offer a wide variety of flavors and textures, and often have a high nutritive value.
The brain, nervous system and spinal cord are usually prepared direct for the table rather than processed for industrial use.
Utilization of poultry by-products
Waste products from the poultry
processing and egg production
industries must be efficiently dealt with
as the growth of these industries
depends largely on waste management.
These wastes, including animal
excreta, mortalities, hair, feathers and
processing wastes are convertible to
useful resources.
Volume of wastewater generated from meat and poultry
industry:
The wastewater produced in it contains a variety of organic
and inorganic pollutants, has a high concentration of etheric
extract, suspended and biogenic matter as well as variable
concentrations.
In poultry processing, water is used primarily for scalding, in
the process of feather removal, bird washing before and after
evisceration, chilling, cleaning and sanitizing of equipment
and facilities.
Rendering (meat and poultry by-product processing)
description:
Rendering processes are processes used to convert the by-
products of meat and poultry processing into marketable
products, including edible and inedible fats and proteins for
agricultural and industrial use.
Materials rendered include viscera, meat scraps including fat,
bone, blood, feathers, hatchery by-products and dead animals.
Lard and food grade tallow are examples of edible rendering
products. Inedible rendering products include industrial and
animal feed grade fats, meat and poultry by-product meals,
feather meal, dried blood, and hydrolyzed hair.
Fish waste/by-products utilization
Fish waste is a great source of minerals,proteins and fat.
Potential utilization of waste fish scrapsfrom 5 marine species to produce fishprotein hydrolysate by enzymictreatment.
collagen or keratin contained inlivestock and fish waste may beconverted to useful products byenzymic hydrolysis, providing newphysiologically functional foodmaterials.
Recovery of proteins from fish wasteproducts by alkaline extraction resulteda good yield of protein from lake waste.
The potential of fish waste
effluent as a fermentation
medium for production of
antibacterial compounds, by
lactic acid bacteria.
The recovery of chemical
components from seafood
waste materials, which can be
used in other segments of the
food industry.
Utilization of waste as biofuel:
The availability of wet biomass as waste from industrial
processes and the need to meet the environmental standards
stand for the main stimuli towards investigating all options in
order to dispose this waste.
Physico-chemical treatment of meat industry wastewater is used
to increase the organic matter removal efficiency.
The utilization of this Biofuel for steam generation has shown to
be a viable alternative.
Biodiesel fuel acquired from the oils and fats of meat and fish is
a substitute for, or an additive to diesel fuel derived from
petroleum.