Home Food Vaess develops biotech solution for nitrite-free bacon

Vaess develops biotech solution for nitrite-free bacon

0
Vaess develops biotech solution for nitrite-free bacon

Nitrite is a common preservative in meat products. Known as E250 in the European Union, the additive is frequently used to give cured meats like bacon a pink colour. In meat, nitrites turn into nitric oxide, which reacts with proteins in the meat, changing its colour and helping preserve it.

But while nitrites serve an important functional purpose, in 2015 a World Health Organization report classified processed meat as carcinogenic because curing – by adding nitrates or nitrites or by smoking – can lead to the formation of potentially cancer-causing chemicals.

“E250 could form carcinogenic nitrosamines in your body and the use of nitrites is already heavily regulated to prevent over-consumption,”​ noted Coen van Oorschot, director at Netherlands-based Vaess.

A nitrite-free stable pink

Leveraging its 75-years of experience, the food engineering company has developed a new approach to removing nitrite from the production process for bacon. “The nitrite-free solutions currently available work with extracts – something we wanted to do differently,”​ van Oorschot explained.

The group worked alongside an unnamed biotech company to collaborate on a solution that uses cultures to preserve the pink appearance of cured meat.

“We worked with a larger biotech company that is active in cultures. That is a very specific activity. We as Vaess know what we do and what we do not know…The fundamental knowledge on cultures, is something where other companies are specialists. We believe that collaboration is speeding up innovation,”​ van Oorschot told FoodNavigator. “We had a theoretical idea, which they were able to make into a reality. With our knowhow of meat products and the mechanism of action of nitrite, and their expertise on bacterial cultures the theoretical idea was proven.”