Food Technology Trends
Transcription
Food Technology Trends
Technology Trends & Solutions for Sustainable Value Chains Beatrice Conde-Petit Buhler AG 2015 Title | Author | 2005 Cereals are the cornerstone of our nutrition Maize, Rice and Wheat sum up to 2’500 Mio MT pa. 1200 Production in Mio MT 1000 800 Maize Rice, paddy Wheat 600 Potatoes Cassava Soybeans 400 Barley Sorghum Oats 200 0 Source: FAO2015 2 | © Bühler | Bühler 2015 | Presentation GF1 What drives innovations in the Grains to Food value chain? Grower Trader Agro-food convertor Food Processor Retailer Solution/ Technology Providers 3 | © Bühler | Consumer The new consumer: a strong driver for innovation Tasty Safe Grower Trader Agro-food convertor Food Processor Retailer Consumer Affordable Convenient Healthy Natural Solution/ Technology Providers Regional Free-off …. 4 | © Bühler | Bread in Europe: the same product but changing value chains Bake-off bread: > 20 % of fresh bread market From Gira 2014 5 | © Bühler | In-store baking requires new food safety concepts Traditional (industrial) baker microbial kill-step Grower Trader Miller Baker raw Retailer Consumer baked In-store baking high hygiene for safety & shelf life Grower Trader Miller low microbial flour 6 | © Bühler | Baker par baked Retailer Consumer baked Salmonella in dry foods: the game changer for the food industry 7 | © Bühler | Salmonella in dry foods: the game changer for the food industry 8 | © Bühler | In-store baking requires new food safety concepts Traditional (industrial) baker microbial kill-step Grower Trader Miller Baker raw Retailer Consumer baked In-store baking high hygiene requirements Grower Trader Miller low microbial flour 9 | © Bühler | Baker parbaked Retailer Consumer baked Salmonella in dry foods: the game changer for the food industry 10 | © Bühler | Innovation on the raw material side What comes beyond wholegrain? Sprouted grains for good nutrition Biotransformation for better taste, good texture and more micronutrients US Market expected to grow from 30 to 250 Mio USD by 2018 Bühler solution: Pargem Biotranformation (Germination, possibly in combination with fermentation) • • • • • • Natural increase of micronutrients (better bioavailabilty of minerals, more vitamins) Natural flavor enhancing Natural source of enzymes Reduction of antinutrients (e.g. phytate) Mild preservation Solubilization of fibres 11 | © Bühler | Wheat production Mio tones It is worth looking at other regions of the world Cereal production shows strong increase in growth regions 12 | © Bühler | B.Conde l 2015 150 CHINA 100 INDIA INDIA: Westernwheat Europe 70 % whole flour North America (Atta) for flat breads, North America India China 50 Western Europe 0 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Atta is a traditional Indian wheat flour for flatbread Processing is done by stone milling The key Atta flour properties: Stone Chakki - whole grain flour (extraction 94-97 % ) - high starch damage - overall fine granulation The challenge - technology for industrial scale milling - safe, reliable, efficient, affordable J. Reddy, S. Weinmann, D. Heine and B. Conde-Petit, Quality Assurance and Safety of Crops & Foods, 4, 2012 13 | © Bühler | B.Conde l 2014 Max Force Toughness Rig [N] The secret of good chapatti texture lies in its high starch damage 12.0 10 µm 10.0 8.0 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 55 60 65 70 75 80 Water absorption Farino 500, 14 % H2O [%] 5 10 Western-type flour →Roller milling 15 20 % Starch damage Challenge: generate mechanical modification of starch upon milling Atta flour J. Reddy, S. Weinmann, D. Heine and B. Conde-Petit, Quality Assurance and Safety of Crops & Foods 4, 2012 14 | © Bühler | B.Conde l 2014 Traditional Atta flour From traditional stone milling to a revolutionary new milling concept Stone Chakki Bühler Pesa Mill A new milling technology - efficient - affordable - Fit-for-purpose 15 | © Bühler | B.Conde l 2015 Traditiona Atta flour From traditional stone milling to a new milling concept Stone Chakki A new milling technology - efficient - affordable - Fit-for-purpose 16 | © Bühler | B.Conde l 2015 Sustainable protein is one of the biggest nutrition challenges Animal protein is valuable, but less sustainable that plant protein 5-6 units 1 unit 70% plant-based proteins animal-based proteins (e.g. grains, legumes, oil seeds, nuts) (e.g. meat, dairy products, fish, eggs) 30% 17 | © Bühler | Proteins | 2015 70% 30% Meat demand is increasing drastically Alternatives to animal protein need to be found 400 meat production (mio t) CAGR = 1.5% 350 300 10% 250 31% 200 150 36% 100 50 36% beef 38% 0 1970 1980 1990 2000 year 18 | © Bühler | Proteins | 2015 21% 2010 2020 2030 What are the alternative protein sources today and tomorrow? growth = 9% in-vitro agricultural waste synthetic biology 2% 8% insects 14% 18% algae moringa, quinoa, chia pulses, rice, canola soy 19 | © Bühler | Proteins | 2015 Solutions to cover meat demand. meat alternatives animal protein meals live animals meat consumption alternative sources cultured meat - soy - maize - …. Conventional sources 20 | © Bühler | Proteins | 2015 Raw material sources for protein cereal seeds pulse seeds insects cereal bran oilseed extraction meal algae short-term 21 | © Bühler | long-term Pulses, the underexploited opportunity 22 | © Bühler | Pulses, the underexploited opportunity FORAGE LEGUMES INDUSTRIAL LEGUMES LEGUMES Global pulse production GRAIN LEGUMES ex: green beans/peas soybeans peanuts PULSES (dry seeds) 60 million metric tons (MT) pa FAO recognizes 11 primary pulses 1. Dry beans (34%) 2. Dry peas (16%) 3. Chickpea (14%) 4. Dry cowpea (9%) 5. Pigeon pea (7%) 6. Dry broad beans (6%) 7. Lentil (6%) 8. Vetch (2%) 9. Lupins (1%) 10. Bambara groundnut (0.1%) 11. Minor pulses 23 | © Bühler | Innovation Day 2011 | S. Bellaio GP71 | 2011 (2%) Why pulses? pulses 15% – 35% cereals protein content 7% – 15% but: taste issues War on wheat (gluten!) digestive disconfort Gluten-free cereals low protein unterutilized in modern food 24 | © Bühler | Protein Summit | 2013 Pulses for product innovation Established technologies for new applications Tailor made conversion into food ingredients Productivity New varieties New product with established technologies Global supply Grading Farmers 25 | © Bühler | Traders Miller Food processors Innovative products Retailer Caterer Consumer Why algae? sunlight for energy fast growth high yields light organic matter CO2 gas valorization wastewater purification CO2 • polysaccharides • lipids • proteins • others H2O N, P lignocellulosic material primary crops no competition for land/water 26 | © Bühler | Proteins | 2015 higher nutritive value Algae classification algae macroalgae microalgae multicellular unicellular in littoral zones of aquatic habits in all zones of aquatic habits also called seaweed also called phytoplankton 27 | © Bühler | Proteins | 2015 VALORIE: Technology for extracting value from algae See Valorie film 28 | © Bühler | And how about insects as new protein source? • They grow on organic waste, • have high nutritional value (13-80% protein, 9-54% fat, minerals, vitamins), • low environmental footprint (lower water & land use, less GHG), • high feed conversion rate (beef 8:1, pig 3:1, chicken 2:1, insects 1.3:1), • and are more than protein (lipids, chitin, etc). 29 | © Bühler | Protein structuring technologies for food will become key Example: cooking extusion barrel with screws die knife Bühler ECO twin cooking 30 | © Bühler | Protein Summit | 2013 structuring cutting A step change in process monitoring, control & automation From new sensors to new business models Online Sensors Real time monitoring of product properties Process control Expert systems Self-learning automation systems Predictive models Statistical process control Value chain intelligence Big data analytics Big data business (Industria 4.0) 31 | © Bühler | Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies relevant for breakthrough innovation in intelligent food process control 32 | © Bühler | www.buhlergroup.com Bühler en España 33 | © Bühler | Nov 2013 Key technological developments Preservation & packaging technologies Mild preservation, non-thermal inactivation technologies Dry processing as alternative to wet processing Smart sensors and advanced process control Plant-based meat alternatives Mild separation technologies, functional fractionation Improvements in resource valorization (by-products, zero waste) 34 | © Bühler | Food Technology Trends | 2015