Extruders Tackle New Food Formulations

Equipment suppliers are working on improved controls, throughput, and flexibility, but one of the biggest focal points is understanding how novel ingredients will affect extrusion performance.

Plant Based Protein Vemiwa Coperion
With the Coperion extrusion system, Vemiwa Foods is able to produce plant-based meat substitutes without artificial additives.
Vemiwa Foods

There is a noticeable trend toward healthier foods, as consumers show increasing awareness about the health impact of their diets. They want more information about what’s in their processed foods, and they’re looking for cleaner labels.

Many food manufacturers are answering that call, and they’re experimenting with their recipe formulations to provide healthier options. All of this, in turn, affects what goes on in the extrusion process—used as a key processing step for a wide range of foods, including snacks, cereals, plant-based meat alternatives, pet food and snacks, and more.

“People are looking for as few additives as possible,” notes Davide Di Nunno, head of process technology for pasta and snacks at GEA, pointing to a clean label approach that aims for shorter ingredient lists.

Consumers are looking for low-fat or even fat-free versions of their favorite foods as well. “We are suggesting alternatives to make fat-free products, so not fried snacks and not fried noodles,” Di Nunno says, pointing to other trends such as lower amounts of salt, higher protein, and plant-based products.

These changes in consumer products have their effects on the extrusion process and technology. For example, shear—the force that creates high temperatures and makes extrusion work—must be evaluated for any new material being used in a recipe.

“The shear is affected by several things, from raw material characteristics to the machine design and of course the settings that we use on that machine—temperature, screw speed, die design, screw design, barrel design—everything is affecting the process,” Di Nunno says.


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But the first consideration is that raw material and how it will affect the shear of the extrusion step. At GEA’s technology center in Galliera Veneta, Italy, which runs trials for customers, a laboratory first analyzes the raw material. “These analyses are particle size, fiber content, fiber length or solubility, protein content, protein solubility, fat content, ash content… All these characteristics affect the extrusion,” Di Nunno explains. “So at the moment that we are going to use a lower amount of fat or a higher amount of protein, this for sure will affect the final texture.”

Some materials might require a change in the process, but other materials might not be acceptable at all. “For instance, a corn flour for a gluten-free pasta cannot be acceptable to make snacks,” Di Nunno says. “In pasta, we prefer to have a higher amount of fat because the reaction of this fat is emulsifying and making the final texture of the product more similar to a traditional pasta texture.”

Snack Pellets GEAA GEA customer based in South Korea is using extrusion to make pellets, which are later expanded to create a new breakfast cereal for the Korean market.GEA

On the other hand, this amount of fat is not wanted in higher-energy extrusion because the fat will be damaged and will develop an acidity that will decrease the shelf life of the final product. This is a factor that makes it difficult to extrude pasta from a chickpea protein, Di Nunno explains. “Chickpea becomes an issue because chickpeas have a higher amount of fat from the crops,” he says. “This higher amount will not allow us to properly gelatinize, to properly shape the product, and then the final product becomes more of a fluffy pasta.”

Some of GEA’s extrusion customers have moved to a new toaster technology—an industrial oven akin to an air fryer—instead of frying to make cereals and snacks fat-free.

One customer based in South Korea is using extrusion to make pellets, which are later expanded with this toaster technology to create a new breakfast cereal for the Korean market. It’s a three-layer, chocolate-based cereal made on perforated sheets. “Usually, the breakfast cereals are directly puffed and not indirectly puffed from a pellet,” Di Nunno says. “They can store it and they can expand it by hot air whenever they like, even after a month, to set the baking. It’s good because they can better manage the warehouse in terms of density of the product because the pellet is smaller.”

Alternative proteins and new ingredients

One sector seeing a lot of experimentation with ingredients is plant-based meat alternatives, where several manufacturers have moved beyond the more typical soy or pea proteins into a range of other proteins such as chickpeas, fava beans, mung beans, and more.

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