Canned history
Introduction:
Canning is a method of preserving food in which the food contents are
processed and sealed in an airtight container (jars like Mason jars, and
steel and tin cans). Canning provides a shelf life typically ranging from
one to five years, although under specific circumstances it can be much
longer.[1] A freeze-dried canned product, such as canned dried lentils,
could last as long as 30 years in an edible state. In 1974, samples of
canned food from the wreck of the Bertrand, a steamboat that sank in the
Missouri River in 1865, were tested by the National Food Processors
Association. Although appearance, smell and vitamin content had
deteriorated, there was no trace of microbial growth and the 109-year-old
food was determined to be still safe to eat
History and development of canning
French origins
During the first years of the Napoleonic Wars, the French government offered a hefty
cash award of 12,000 francs to any inventor who could devise a cheap and effective
method of preserving large amounts of food. The larger armies of the period required
increased and regular supplies of quality food. Limited food availability was among
the factors limiting military campaigns to the summer and autumn months. In 1809,
Nicolas Appert, a French confectioner and brewer, observed that food cooked inside a
jar did not spoil unless the seals leaked, and developed a method of sealing food in
glass jars.[3] Appert was awarded the prize in 1810 by Count Montelivert, a French
minister of the interior.[4] The reason for lack of spoilage was unknown at the
time, since it would be another 50 years before Louis Pasteur demonstrated the role
of microbes in food spoilage.
Appert canning jar
Nicolas Appert, developer of the canning process
The French Army began experimenting with issuing canned foods to its soldiers, but
the slow process of canning foods and the even slower development and transport
stages prevented the army from shipping large amounts across the French Empire, and
the war ended before the process was perfected.
Following the end of the Napoleonic Wars, the canning process was gradually employed
in other European countries and in the US.
In the United Kingdom
>
A Dixie Can Sealer for home use. Now in Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum.
Based on Appert's methods of food preservation, the tin can process was allegedly
developed by Frenchman Philippe de Girard, who came to London and used British
merchant Peter Durand as an agent to patent his own idea in 1810.[5] Durand did not
pursue food canning himself, selling his patent in 1811 to Bryan Donkin and John
Hall, who were in business as Donkin Hall and Gamble, of Bermondsey.[6] Bryan Donkin
developed the process of packaging food in sealed airtight cans, made of tinned
wrought iron. Initially, the canning process was slow and labour-intensive, as each
large can had to be hand-made, and took up to six hours to cook, making canned food
too expensive for ordinary people.
The main market for the food at this stage was the British Army and Royal Navy. By
1817 Donkin recorded that he had sold £3000 worth of canned meat in six months. In
1824 Sir William Edward Parry took canned beef and pea soup with him on his voyage
to the Arctic in HMS Fury, during his search for a northwestern passage to India. In
1829, Admiral Sir James Ross also took canned food to the Arctic, as did Sir John
Franklin in 1845.[7] Some of his stores were found by the search expedition led by
Captain (later Admiral Sir) Leopold McClintock in 1857. One of these cans was opened
in 1939, and was edible and nutritious, though it was not analysed for contamination
by the lead solder used in its manufacture.
In Europe
During the mid-19th century, canned food became a status symbol amongst middle-class
households in Europe, being something of a frivolous novelty. Early methods of
manufacture employed poisonous lead solder for sealing the cans. Studies in the
1980s attributed the lead from the cans as a factor in the disastrous outcome of the
1845 Franklin expedition to chart and navigate the Northwest Passage.[8]Later
studies found this to be false.[9]
Increasing mechanization of the canning process, coupled with a huge increase in
urban populations across Europe, resulted in a rising demand for canned food. A
number of inventions and improvements followed, and by the 1860s smaller
machine-made steel cans were possible, and the time to cook food in sealed cans had
been reduced from around six hours to thirty minutes.
In the United States
1914 magazine advertisement for cookware with instructions for home canning
Canned food also began to spread beyond Europe – Robert Ayars established the first
American canning factory in New York City in 1812, using improved tin-plated
wrought-iron cans for preserving oysters, meats, fruits and vegetables. Demand for
canned food greatly increased during wars. Large-scale wars in the nineteenth
century, such as the Crimean War, American Civil War, and Franco-Prussian
Warintroduced increasing numbers of working-class men to canned food, and allowed
canning companies to expand their businesses to meet military demands for
non-perishable food, allowing companies to manufacture in bulk and sell to wider
civilian markets after wars ended. Urban populations in Victorian Britain demanded
ever-increasing quantities of cheap, varied, quality food that they could keep at
home without having to go shopping daily. In response, companies such as Underwood,
Nestlé, Heinz, and others provided quality canned food for sale to working class
city-dwellers. In particular, Crosse and Blackwell took over the concern of Donkin
Hall and Gamble. The late 19th century saw the range of canned food available to
urban populations greatly increase, as canners competed with each other using novel
foodstuffs, highly decorated printed labels, and lower prices.
World War I
Demand for canned food skyrocketed during World War I, as military commanders sought
vast quantities of cheap, high-calorie food to feed their millions of soldiers,
which could be transported safely, survive trench conditions, and not spoil in
transport. Throughout the war, British soldiers generally subsisted on low-quality
canned foodstuffs, such as the British "Bully Beef" (cheap corned beef), pork and
beans, canned sausages, and Maconochies Irish Stew, but by 1916, widespread
dissatisfaction and increasing complaints about the cheap canned food amongst
soldiers resulted in militaries purchasing better-quality food to improve morale,
and complete meals-in-a-can began to appear. In 1917, the French Army began issuing
canned French cuisine, such as coq au vin, Beef Bourguignon and Vichyssoise while
the Italian Armyexperimented with canned ravioli, spaghetti bolognese, Minestrone
and Pasta e fagioli. Shortages of canned food in the British Army in 1917 led to the
government issuing cigarettes and amphetamines to soldiers to suppress their
appetites. After the war, companies that had supplied military canned food improved
the quality of their goods for civilian sale.
Methods
The original fragile and heavy glass containers presented challenges for
transportation, and glass jars were largely replaced in commercial canneries with
cylindrical tin can or wrought-iron canisters (later shortened to "cans") following
the work of Peter Durand (1810). Cans are cheaper and quicker to make, and much less
fragile than glass jars. Glass jars have remained popular for some high-value
products and in home canning. Can openers were not invented for another thirty years
— at first, soldiers had to cut the cans open with bayonets or smash them open with
rocks.[citation needed] Today, tin-coated steel is the material most commonly used.
Laminate vacuum pouches are also used for canning, such as used in MREs and Capri
Sun drinks.
To prevent the food from being spoiled before and during containment, a number of
methods are used: pasteurisation, boiling (and other applications of high
temperature over a period of time), refrigeration, freezing, drying, vacuum
treatment, antimicrobial agents that are natural to the recipe of the foods being
preserved, a sufficient dose of ionizing radiation, submersion in a strong saline
solution, acid, base, osmotically extreme (for example very sugary) or other
microbially-challenging environments.
Other than sterilization, no method is perfectly dependable as a preservative. For
example, the microorganism Clostridium botulinum (which causes botulism) can be
eliminated only at temperatures above the boiling point of water.
From a public safety point of view, foods with low acidity (a pH more than 4.6) need
sterilization under high temperature (116–130 °C). To achieve temperatures above the
boiling point requires the use of a pressure canner. Foods that must be pressure
canned include most vegetables, meat, seafood, poultry, and dairy products. The only
foods that may be safely canned in an ordinary boiling water bath are highly acidic
ones with a pH below 4.6,[10] such as fruits, pickled vegetables, or other foods to
which acidic additives have been added.
Double seams
Invented in 1888 by Max Ams,[11] modern double seams provide an airtight seal to the
tin can. This airtight nature is crucial to keeping micro-organisms out of the can
and keeping its contents sealed inside. Thus, double seamed cans are also known as
Sanitary Cans. Developed in 1900 in Europe, this sort of can was made of the
traditional cylindrical body made with tin plate. The two ends (lids) were attached
using what is now called a double seam. A can thus sealed is impervious to
contamination by creating two tight continuous folds between the can's cylindrical
body and the lids. This eliminated the need for solder and allowed improvements in
manufacturing speed, reducing cost.
Double seaming uses rollers to shape the can, lid and the final double seam. To make
a sanitary can and lid suitable for double seaming, manufacture begins with a sheet
of coated tin plate. To create the can body, rectangles are cut and curled around a
die, and welded together creating a cylinder with a side seam.
Rollers are then used to flare out one or both ends of the cylinder to create a
quarter circle flange around the circumference. Precision is required to ensure that
the welded sides are perfectly aligned, as any misalignment will cause inconsistent
flange shape, compromising its integrity.
A circle is then cut from the sheet using a die cutter. The circle is shaped in a
stamping press to create a downward countersink to fit snugly into the can body. The
result can be compared to an upside down and very flat top hat. The outer edge is
then curled down and around about 140 degrees using rollers to create the end curl.
The result is a steel tube with a flanged edge, and a countersunk steel disc with a
curled edge. A rubber compound is put inside the curl.
The body and end are brought together in a seamer and held in place by the base
plate and chuck, respectively. The base plate provides a sure footing for the can
body during the seaming operation and the chuck fits snugly into the end (lid). The
result is the countersink of the end sits inside the top of the can body just below
the flange. The end curl protrudes slightly beyond the flange.
First operation[edit]
Once brought together in the seamer, the seaming head presses a first operation
roller against the end curl. The end curl is pressed against the flange curling it
in toward the body and under the flange. The flange is also bent downward, and the
end and body are now loosely joined together. The first operation roller is then
retracted. At this point five thicknesses of steel exist in the seam. From the
outside in they are:
• End
• Flange
• End Curl
• Body
• Countersink
Second operation
The seaming head then engages the second operation roller against the partly formed
seam. The second operation presses all five steel components together tightly to
form the final seal. The five layers in the final seam are then called; a) End, b)
Body Hook, c) Cover Hook, d) Body, e) Countersink. All sanitary cans require a
filling medium within the seam because otherwise the metal-to-metal contact will not
maintain a hermetic seal. In most cases, a rubberized compound is placed inside the
end curl radius, forming the critical seal between the end and the body.
Probably the most important innovation since the introduction of double seams is the
welded side seam. Prior to the welded side seam, the can body was folded and/or
soldered together, leaving a relatively thick side seam. The thick side seam
required that the side seam end juncture at the end curl to have more metal to curl
around before closing in behind the Body Hook or flange, with a greater opportunity
for error.
Seamer setup and quality assurance
Many different parts during the seaming process are critical in ensuring that a can
is airtight and vacuum sealed. The dangers of a can that is not hermetically sealed
are contamination by foreign objects (bacteria or fungicide sprays), or that the can
could leak or spoil.
One important part is the seamer setup. This process is usually performed by an
experienced technician. Amongst the parts that need setup are seamer rolls and
chucks which have to be set in their exact position (using a feeler gauge or a
clearance gauge). The lifter pressure and position, roll and chuck designs, tooling
wear, and bearing wear all contribute to a good double seam.
Incorrect setups can be non-intuitive. For example, due to the springback effect, a
seam can appear loose, when in reality it was closed too tight and has opened up
like a spring. For this reason, experienced operators and good seamer setup are
critical to ensure that double seams are properly closed.
Quality control usually involves taking full cans from the line – one per seamer
head, at least once or twice per shift, and performing a teardown operation
(wrinkle/tightness), mechanical tests (external thickness, seamer length/height and
countersink) as well as cutting the seam open with a twin blade saw and measuring
with a double seam inspection system. The combination of these measurements will
determine the seam's quality.
Use of a statistical process control (SPC) software in conjunction with a manual
double-seam monitor, computerized double seam scanner, or even a fully automatic
double seam inspection system makes the laborious process of double seam inspection
faster and much more accurate. Statistically tracking the performance of each head
or seaming station of the can seamer allows for better prediction of can seamer
issues, and may be used to plan maintenance when convenient, rather than to simply
react after bad or unsafe cans have been produced.[12]
Nutritional value
Canning is a way of processing food to extend its shelf life. The idea is to make
food available and edible long after the processing time. A 1997 study found that
canned fruits and vegetables are as rich with dietary fiber and vitamins as the same
corresponding fresh or frozen foods, and in some cases the canned products are
richer than their fresh or frozen counterparts.[13] The heating process during
canning appears to make dietary fiber more soluble, and therefore more readily
fermented in the colon into gases and physiologically active byproducts. Canned
tomatoes have a higher available lycopene content. Consequently, canned meat and
vegetables are often among the list of food items that are stocked during
emergencies.[14]
Potential hazards
Women working in a cannery
In the beginning of the 19th century the process of canning foods was mainly done by
small canneries. These canneries were full of overlooked sanitation problems, such
as poor hygiene and unsanitary work environments. Since the refrigerator did not
exist and industrial canning standards were not set in place it was very common for
contaminated cans to slip onto the grocery store shelves. [15]
Migration of can components
In canning toxicology, migration is the movement of substances from the can itself
into the contents.[16] Potential toxic substances that can migrate are lead, causing
lead poisoning, or bisphenol A (BPA), a potential endocrine disruptor that is an
ingredient in the epoxy commonly used to coat the inner surface of cans. Some cans
are manufactured with a BPA-free enamel lining produced from plant oils and
resins.[17]On 20 February 2018, Packaging Digest reported that "At least 90%" of
food cans no longer contained BPA.[18]
Salt content
Salt (sodium chloride), dissolved in water, is used in the canning process.[19] As a
result, canned food can be a major source of dietary salt.[20] Too much salt
increases the risk of health problems, including high blood pressure. Therefore,
health authorities have recommended limitations of dietary
sodium.[21][22][23][24][25] Many canned products are available in low-salt and
no-salt alternatives.
Rinsing thoroughly after opening may reduce the amount of salt in canned foods,
since much of the salt content is thought to be in the liquid, rather than the food
itself.[26]
Botulism
Foodborne botulism results from contaminated foodstuffs in which C. botulinum spores
have been allowed to germinate and produce botulism toxin,[27] and this typically
occurs in canned non-acidic food substances that have not received a strong enough
thermal heat treatment. C. botulinum prefers low oxygen environments and is a poor
competitor to other bacteria, but its spores are resistant to thermal treatments.
When a canned food is sterilized insufficiently, most other bacteria besides the C.
botulinum spores are killed, and the spores can germinate and produce botulism
toxin.[27] Botulism is a rare but serious paralytic illness, leading to paralysis
that typically starts with the muscles of the face and then spreads towards the
limbs.[28] The botulinum toxin is extremely dangerous because it cannot be detected
by sight or smell, and ingestion of even a small amount of the toxin can be
deadly.[29] In severe forms, it leads to paralysis of the breathing muscles and
causes respiratory failure. In view of this life-threatening complication, all
suspected cases of botulism are treated as medical emergencies, and public health
officials are usually involved to prevent further cases from the same source.[28]
Canning and economic recession
Canned goods and canning supplies sell particularly well in times of recession due
to the tendency of financially stressed individuals to engage in cocooning, a term
used by retail analysts to describe the phenomenon in which people choose to stay at
home instead of adding expenditures to their budget by dining out and socializing
outside the home.
In February 2009 during a recession, the United States saw an 11.5% rise in sales of
canning-related items.[30]
Some communities in the US have county canning centers which are available for
teaching canning, or shared community kitchens which can be rented for canning one's
own foods
Reference
1- Research and laboratory team of Bandar food industry
2. Wikipedia
3. The book of canning industries, principles and applications, authored by Javad
Hesari
4. Canning, Rasoul Payan Engineer