Otago Daily Times

Technology improving food, visiting professor says

- JOHN GIBB

THE New Zealand food processing industry and consumers can gain ‘‘winwin’’ benefits, through using the right technologi­es to make food ‘‘safer and healthier’’, Marc Hendrickx says.

Prof Hendrickx is a Belgian food scientist who is being hosted by the University of Otago food science department this month as the inaugural Harraways 1867 Visiting Professors­hip recipient.

His visit comes thanks to a $100,000 gift from one of the country’s oldest food processing companies, Harraways and Sons Ltd, of Dunedin, which instituted the professors­hip to mark its 150th anniversar­y, last year.

Prof Hendrickx is head of the Laboratory of Food Technology at the Katholieke Universite­it Leuven, in Belgium.

He visited the Harraway’s Green Island plant yesterday, and said later he was optimistic about the future of new and emerging food processing technologi­es.

Research findings in the ‘‘very exciting’’ new and emerging technologi­es were also bringing important benefits for more traditiona­l thermal food processing.

Highpressu­re processing was already bringing positive benefits and preprocess­ing by using electrical pulses was a promising emerging approach.

Food science had helped produce food for people who ‘‘value allnatural health foods’’, which were produced using sustainabl­e methods, and with a ‘‘low environmen­tal impact’’.

Prof Hendrickx will give the Harraways Public Lecture at the university on Monday, titled ‘‘Rethinking Food Processing in a Changing World’’.

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? New insights . . . University of Otago food science department head Indrawati Oey and Marc Hendrickx, the inaugural Harraways 1867 Visiting Professors­hip recipient.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN New insights . . . University of Otago food science department head Indrawati Oey and Marc Hendrickx, the inaugural Harraways 1867 Visiting Professors­hip recipient.

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