Futuristic Freezing, Koji, Cheese Microbiome, Wine-Bottle Resonators. November 26, 2021, Part 1
Science Friday
Science Friday and WNYC Studios
4.4 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 26 November 2021
⏱️ 47 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. We've all had that moment. You've got that pint of |
| 0:06.2 | ice cream in the freezer. Strawberry maybe? I'll go with coffee. You've been looking forward to this treat |
| 0:11.9 | all day. You open the carton and it's covered in ice crystals. Freezer burn. Your ice cream is |
| 0:19.7 | going to taste bad and feel chalky and strange in your mouth. |
| 0:23.3 | Those little chunks of strawberry, weirdly crunchy, bleh, as they say. That dreaded freezer burn |
| 0:30.9 | happens when the water in your food forms ice crystals that destroy the cellular structure |
| 0:36.0 | of the food itself. It's a common risk when we preserve |
| 0:39.3 | food by exposing it to very cold air, right? And the result is bad taste, of course, but also some |
| 0:46.2 | loss of the food's nutritional value. That's the bad news. The good news is USDA food scientists, |
| 0:54.1 | working with a team at the University of California, Berkeley, |
| 0:57.4 | have something that could solve that problem. A whole new method of chilling food to preserve it. |
| 1:04.3 | This new method called isochoric freezing actually plays with pressure, so the food becomes cold |
| 1:10.7 | without its moisture turning into ice. |
| 1:13.7 | No ice? No freezer burn. And potentially a much lower energy footprint for the commercial food industry. |
| 1:20.6 | We're talking billions fewer kilowatt hours. Here first to explain more about why this is so exciting, |
| 1:27.2 | Dr. Christina Bilbao, |
| 1:28.8 | a food technologist with the USDA's Agricultural Research Service in Albany, California. |
| 1:34.6 | Welcome, Christina. |
| 1:36.2 | Hi, hi, Iran. Thank you. Thank you for inviting me to the show. |
| 1:40.2 | Always a pleasure. Maybe you were a little frozen there, because you know we're going to talk about freezing, right? |
| 1:45.1 | Yeah. I had no idea that we needed a new way to freeze food. Why is conventional food freezing flawed? |
| 1:53.9 | So conventional freezing, it has the advantage that the temperature is very low. It can slow down the deterioration processes such as |
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