O. Vitrac et al., Deep-fat frying of food: heat and mass transfer, transformations and reactions inside the frying material, EUR J LIPID, 102(8-9), 2000, pp. 529-538
Deep-fat frying is a popular process that has been studied essentially to c
larify the complex mechanisms of fat decomposition at high temperatures and
to assess their effects on human health. The aim of this paper is to show
how the application of process engineering methods has recently improved ou
r understanding of the basic principles and mechanisms involved at differen
t scales and different times during the process: pretreatment, frying, and
cooling.
New results concerning the understanding of the frying process have been ob
tained as a result of major breakthroughs in on-line instrumentation (heat,
steam flux, and local pressure sensors), in the methodology of microstruct
ural and imaging analysis (NMR, MRI, SEM) and in software tools for the sim
ulation of coupled transfer and transport phenomena. Such advances have ope
ned up the way for the creation of a major database of the behavior of vari
ous materials and to the development of new tools to control frying operati
ons via final product quality in real conditions. Lastly, this paper promot
es an integrated approach to the frying process including various competenc
ies such as those of chemists, engineers, toxicologists, nutritionists, and
materials scientists as well as of the catering and industrial sectors.