Pasteurization
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Pasteurization is a heat-treatment process designed to kill bacteria.
It is not as thorough as sterilization: it is not intended to kill all micro-organisms, just to greatly reduce the number of ones that could cause illness and disease. It also extends the refrigerated shelf life of products.
A Pasteurization method known as "High Temperature Short Time" is designed to kill 99.999% of the number of the micro-organisms in fluid milk. (Note
it doesn't remove the microbes; it just kills them.)
Pasteurization processes are usually legally defined in country or in a jurisdiction, by laws governing food.
There are two main Pasteurization techniques:
- High Temperature/Short Time (HTST)
- Ultra High Temperature (UHT)
There is also a third process, Thermalization, which most government health departments don't recognize as Pasteurization for legal purposes.
Pasteurization is typically applied to dairy, fruit juices, and (in North America) apple cider. Since September 2007, all almonds produced in California have to be pasteurized.
There is now also a technique for pasteurizing whole, shell eggs. See the entry on Pasteurized Eggs.
Unpasteurized milk is referred to as raw milk.
History Notes for Pasteurization
Acknowledgements
See Also:
Cider, Listeria, Milk, Pasteurized Eggs
Other entries for: Pasteurization
HTST Pasteurization, Micro-Filtered Milk, Thermalize, UHT Pasteurization
Other entries for: Technical Terms
EU Designations, Kosher, Measurements, Organic Food



