Hendrickx M, Maesmans G, De Cordt S, Noronha J, Van Loey A, Tobback P
Katholieke Universiteit te Leuven, Faculty of Agricultural and Applied Biological Sciences.
Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 1995 Jan;35(3):231-62. doi: 10.1080/10408399509527700.
In this review, current methods used to evaluate the integrated impact of time and temperature upon preserving a food product by a heat treatment are considered. After identifying the basic premise any preservation scheme shall meet, the central role of a feasible description for the heat activation kinetics of microorganisms, their spores, and other quality attributes are stressed. Common concepts to quantify a thermal process are presented. Shortcomings of the prevalent evaluation methods are highlighted and attention is given to the development, restrictions, and possibilities of time-temperature-integrators as "new" evaluation tools to measure the impact of a "classical" in-pack heat treatment and more modern heating techniques such as continuous processing of solid/liquid mixtures on foods.