Cold Link Africa September 2019 | Page 44

FEATURE INCORPORATING COLD CHAIN Speed syndrome in cooling fruit... By Jan Lievens of UTE The last 5% of your timing in your product cycle is important, yet there seems to be a problem for a lot of people to understand the importance is of this statement… N ow, I’m really going to throw pigeons. There is a vast difference between making something cold, and cooling fruit... A lot has, and still is, being said about the time that is needed to cool grapes down to the prescribed temperatures of +0.8° C or even still -0.5°C. Everybody wants to cool down as fast as possible and looks at the clock to get the forced air cooling tunnel time down to a sometimes-ridiculous fast time. Now, that’s all good and well but in the first place, the rule of thumb seems to have been be forgotten here; an un-cooled table grape deteriorates in an hour at 32°C as much as in a day at 4°C or a week at 0° C. Secondly, did you ever measure, and do all your boxes get measured on the correct end temperature on every 44 www.coldlinkafrica.co.za a battery of cats among the If the core temperature of your ‘hottest’ box is above the required core temperature, it’s a potential recipe for disaster. COLD LINK AFRICA • SEPTEMBER 2019