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DVD video

Title Processing and preserving foods
Published Bendigo, Vic. : Classroom Video, 2008

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  664 Cla/Pap  AVAILABLE
Description 1 videodisc (DVD) (23 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in. + notes (10 pages ; 30 cm)
Summary This fascinating program looks at why we preserve and process foods, how we do it in different cultures and the health considerations we need to take into account when we do it today. The preservation of food has been a life-saving practice in every human society since the dawn of time. Food, by its very nature, begins to spoil almost as soon as it is harvested so, to survive and thrive in ancient times, people had to learn to preserve the bounty to see them through lean times. In frozen climates, meat was kept in the ice. In tropical climates food was dried in the sun. In moderate climates salt and oil did the work. And this preservation allowed mankind to put down roots and create a society by remaining in one location. Each culture preserved their local food sources using the same basic methods of food preservation such as drying, freezing, fermenting, pickling and curing. But, within cultures, the preservation of food isn?t strictly for sustenance. There are also cultural aspects. All across the world there are many religious and celebratory occasions where the preservation of foods now has a social and customary meaning. The approach is now taken that we preserve food because we want to, rather than because we have to. This program includes an introduction to the workings of HACCP
Notes "English captions for the deaf and hearing impaired" -- container
DVD
English captions for the deaf and hearing impaired
Subject Food -- Preservation.
Food industry and trade.
Genre/Form Video recordings.
Author Classroom Video (Firm)