We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Fruit-Based Fermented Beverages: Contamination Sources and Emerging Technologies Applied to Assure Their Safety.
Summary
This review examines contamination risks in fruit-based fermented beverages, including microbiological hazards, chemical residues, and emerging contaminants. Microplastics are noted as an emerging contamination concern in food and beverage processing, and the review evaluates technologies to ensure product safety.
The food and beverage market has become broader due to globalization and consumer claims. Under the umbrella of consumer demands, legislation, nutritional status, and sustainability, the importance of food and beverage safety must be decisive. A significant sector of food production is related to ensuring fruit and vegetable conservation and utilization through fermentation. In this respect, in this review, we critically analyzed the scientific literature regarding the presence of chemical, microbiological and physical hazards in fruit-based fermented beverages. Furthermore, the potential formation of toxic compounds during processing is also discussed. In managing the risks, biological, physical, and chemical techniques can reduce or eliminate any contaminant from fruit-based fermented beverages. Some of these techniques belong to the technological flow of obtaining the beverages (i.e., mycotoxins bound by microorganisms used in fermentation) or are explicitly applied for a specific risk reduction (i.e., mycotoxin oxidation by ozone). Providing manufacturers with information on potential hazards that could jeopardize the safety of fermented fruit-based drinks and strategies to lower or eliminate these hazards is of paramount importance.
Sign in to start a discussion.
More Papers Like This
Beer Safety: New Challenges and Future Trends within Craft and Large-Scale Production
This review evaluated safety concerns in beer production, covering contaminants including bacteria, yeasts, molds, mycotoxins, heavy metals, biogenic amines, and micro- and nanoplastics. The study highlights that expanding beer varieties and production methods introduce new contamination risks, and identifies gaps in current strategies for reducing or eliminating these contaminants.
Microplastics in Foods and Beverages
This review examines microplastic contamination across a wide range of food and beverage products, describing the detection techniques used to identify microplastic particles and summarizing findings on which products are most affected. The authors also discuss the potential health consequences of human dietary microplastic ingestion.
Determination of microparticles, in particular microplastics in beverages
This study reviewed and tested methods for detecting microparticles including microplastics in beverages, addressing a gap in food safety monitoring. The research is relevant to understanding human exposure to microplastics through drinking water and packaged beverages.
Microplastic contamination in fermented beverages: A case study of kvass
Researchers used micro-FTIR spectroscopy to characterize microplastics in kvass, a popular fermented beverage. The study found an average of about 82 microplastic particles per liter, with various polymer types and sizes detected, suggesting that fermented beverages represent a previously underexamined route of dietary microplastic exposure.
Chemical safety of food products: problems and solutions (literature review)
This literature review examines chemical safety challenges in food production and processing, covering contamination by pesticides, heavy metals, mycotoxins, and emerging pollutants including microplastics, and discussing regulatory and technological solutions.