
Dr. John Miles addressed this conference on the following two topics:

Ingredient Functionality In UHT and HTST Products: How Do We Get Lab/Pilot Results To Match Those At The Plant?
Executive Summary
Ingredient performance and the consequent product quality are altered significantly by the time-temperature exposures of UHT and HTST processes. Additionally, the range of conditions used for these processes is extremely broad. Too often, extra plant trials are needed to refine formulations and achieve required functionality at the plant. This is often because important details have not been properly addressed during plant trials in the lab and pilot plant. Understanding the details of these processes and how they alter ingredient functionality is critical to formulating efficiently and reducing time to market. This presentation will provide the following:
• A discussion of how specific process operations and their order influence ingredient functionality.
• Specific details of how to identify and rank process operations in their order of importance
• Solid guidelines for how to match the impact of the manufacturing process at the lab and pilot level to improve development timetables.
Formulating For and With Steam Injection Processing
Executive Summary
Steam injection and infusion processes affect product quality very differently than “conventional” indirect processes. The most obvious influences are the reduction in heating and cooling times from direct heating and vacuum cooling. However, the details of how these are accomplished contribute to product quality. These processes have become common as products using them, like milk, milk replacements, and soy-milks have become more popular. As a consequence, product developers and formulators need to be more familiar with the details and challenges of these processes.
This presentation will provide the following:
• A review of these processes, highlighting the quality-critical steps
• Discussion of how and why these influence quality
• Discussion of how specific processing operations can be used and changed to modify and improve quality
• Discussion of how these processes can be simulated at smaller scale.