[ Radura [

 
Center For Consumer Research - Food Irradiation
 
What is Food Irradiation?
What's New in Food Irradiation

Why should I care about irradiated food?

Message Board concerning Food Irradiation

What Foods Can Be Irradiated

What is Food Irradiation?
    - What is Food Irradiation?
    - How does Food Irradiation work?
    - Why irradiate foods?
    - How do irradiated products taste?

Who Recommends Food Irradiation?

Who Opposes Food Irradiation and Why?

Myths about Food Irradiation

Are Irradiated Foods in the Supermarket?
    - Are Irradiated Foods in U.S. Supermarkets Now?
    - Is This Technology Being Used in Other Countries?

Food Irradiation Safety Issues
    - Is Irradiated Food Safe?
    - How is Safety Tested?
    - Does Nutritional Value Change After Irradiation?
    - Are There Hazards with Food Irradiation?
    - Are Irradiated Foods Labeled?

How is Food Irradiation Regulated?

Consumer Acceptance of Food Irradiation

History of Food Irradiation

More Information on Food Irradiation

Questionaire and Feedback Form

Collaborators

Main Page

Search This Site


(Excludes Message Board)

Updated: May 07, 2000

Email Webmaster

 
What is Food Irradiation? How does Food Irradiation work?
Why irradiate foods? How do irradiated products taste?
What is Food Irradiation?
In food irradiation, food is exposed to a carefully measured amount of ionizing radiation.

 [Irradiation Chamber] This is done in a special processing room or chamber for a specified duration of time.

With food irradiation, radiant energy (electrons, gamma rays, or x-rays) breaks chemical bonds, just as in cooking, but so few bonds are broken that the food is like fresh.

 [Onions & Potatoes] With a low level treatment, the sprouting of foods like onions and potatoes is stopped. With additional treatment insects which would eat fruit or grains are destroyed. A higher treatment acts as a "cold pasteurization" and destroys a significant amount of bacteria that could lead to foodborne disease.

Still higher treatment is used to make food "shelf stable," like canned food, but without the flavor changes characteristic of canned food. Astronauts have eaten shelf stable irradiated foods since the beginning of the space program.

A Food Irradiation Plant is not a Nuclear Reactor. See How it Works