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Published byGunnar Sea Modified over 9 years ago
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Ice- Cream Food Facts & Fallacies YSCN0006
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I scream You scream We all scream for ice-cream
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What is ice-cream? 1 Cool Smooth Yummy
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What is ice-cream? 2 Water Fat Carbohydrate Protein Air
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What is ice-cream? 3 Solid (at low temp) Liquid (at room temp) A colloid Emulsion Frozen foam
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What is a Colloid ? Physical states Solids, Liquids, Gases and…. Stable mixtures of them are colloids Emulsion, solid dispersed in a liquid Foam, gas dispersed in a liquid
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Milk ~ Fat in water emulsion
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Butter ~ Water in fat emulsion
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Ice-cream
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Sizes dissolved sugars, polysaccharides, proteins fat globules 1 to 5 µm ice crystals 30 to 50 µm air bubbles 50 to 100 µm
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Making ice cream Ingredients Mixing Freezing Hardening
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Ingredients Sucrose 15% Milk fat 15%(legal min. 10%) Non-fat milk solids 10%(lactose & casein) Corn syrup 5%(fructose & dextrins) Stabilisers 0.4%(polysaccharides) Emulsifier 0.2%(mono or di-glycerides) Water
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Making ice-cream Mixing of ingredients and homogenisation to give small fat globules. Pasteurisation to cook and sterilise the mix Cooling, allows crystallisation of fat in globules
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After homogenisation Addition of liquid flavours Colouring Fruit puree
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Freezing Uses a scraped barrel freezer Simultaneous beating and freezing Beating to destabilize fat emulsion incorporate air
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The Importance of Air - 40°C - 5°C
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Not Enough Air a solid lump of ice? Too cold Too hard Too rich, percentage fat too high
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Too Much Air Dry texture Melts too quickly Correct quantity around 50% of volume = overrun of 100 overrun is used to control the texture of ice- cream
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After Freezing about 50% water frozen Sot texture = Soft serve ice-cream as used for cones Particulate addition, eg. nuts, biscuit crumbs, chocolate chips Packaging
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Freeze concentration dissolved solutes depress the freezing point of a liquid the higher the concentration the greater the depression as the ice-cream water freezes the concentration of sugars increases even at very low temperatures there will be a small amount of unfrozen water present
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Hardening Continuous blast freezer or batch freezer -40 °C remaining water frozen ice-cream stable if kept below -25°C
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Ice crystals essential to stabilise air bubbles too big give a gritty texture small crystals formed by good nucleation rapid freezing ice crystals grow if temperature fluctuates
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Emulsifiers & Stabilisers Emulsifiers –help fat globule breakdown –essential to stabilise air bubbles Stabilisers –reduce ice-crystal growth
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Sugar crystals formation of lactose crystals detectable as gritty sandiness in texture avoided by fast freezing and rapid formation of glass
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Other Ices Sorbet & water ices (no milk fat, high fruit) Sherbets (added citric acid) Frozen yoghourt (fermented milk solids) Ice-milk (3-5% milk fat)
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Ice Bars & Novelties Formed by moulding or extrusion Moulding requires a stick! Centre filling possible with moulded bars After freezing products can be coated and enrobed
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Dr Ramsden’s special HKU chocolate ice -cream Chocolate 60g Milk200ml Cream400ml Sugar150g Vanilla10ml Egg yolk x 3
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Preparation method melt chocolate & mix with milk mix egg yolks with sugar add cream and vanilla to chocolate milk and bring to boil allow to cool & then add egg sugar mix at low heat for 15 min 4°C for 4 hours freeze for 30 min harden at 30°C 12 h
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