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Technological developments and the need for technical competencies in food services.

Svetlana Rodgers1

  • 1School of Management, Campbelltown Campus, University of Western Sydney, Penrith South DC, NSW 1797, Australia. s.rodgers@uws.edu.au

The Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health
|June 1, 2005
PubMed
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Large-scale food services face challenges in producing safe, high-quality meals. Advanced food technologies are complex, requiring expertise in food science and engineering to overcome safety and quality issues.

Area of Science:

  • Food Science
  • Microbiology
  • Food Service Technology
  • Packaging Technology

Background:

  • Institutional and commercial food services are expanding, presenting challenges in maintaining meal safety, sensory appeal, and nutritional value at scale.
  • Modern food service systems like cook-freeze and cook-chill offer nutritionally superior alternatives to fast food but increase operational complexity.
  • Current systems grapple with production complexities, inherent cook-chill food safety weaknesses, limitations in Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) management, temperature inconsistencies, and product degradation during storage.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To highlight the technological challenges in large-scale food service operations.
  • To identify the critical knowledge gaps and limitations in current food service technologies.
  • To emphasize the need for integrating advanced food science and engineering principles.

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Main Methods:

  • Analysis of current food service technologies and their operational complexities.
  • Identification of weaknesses in food safety designs, particularly for cook-chill systems.
  • Review of limitations in Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) implementation and temperature control.

Main Results:

  • Food service operations are increasingly complex due to reliance on technology, equipment, and specialized knowledge.
  • Significant challenges exist in managing food safety, ensuring consistent temperature distribution, and preventing product deterioration.
  • Advanced nutritional enhancement techniques, such as natural preservation hurdles and functional meals, are currently underutilized in practice.

Conclusions:

  • Effective management of large-scale food services requires a strong foundation in food science, microbiology, engineering, and packaging.
  • Current food service technologies face practical limitations in ensuring consistent safety, quality, and nutritional value.
  • There is a missed opportunity to implement innovative, high-tech solutions for improved nutritional outcomes in food services.