Hi Everyone
This is more for the ladies who use it in the kitchen.
How is gelatin made?

Gelatin is a protein substance derived from
collagen,
a natural protein present in the tendons, ligaments, and tissues of mammals. It 
is produced by boiling the connective tissues, bones and skins of animals,
usually cows and pigs. Gelatin's ability to form strong, transparent
gels
and flexible films that are easily digested,
soluble
in hot water, and capable of forming a positive binding action have made it a 
valuable commodity in food processing, pharmaceuticals, photography, and paper
production.

As a
foodstuff,
gelatin is the basis for jellied desserts; used in the preservation of fruit 
and meat, and to make powdered milk, merinque,
taffy,
marshmallow, and
fondant.
It is also used to
clarify
beer and wine. Gelatin's industrial applications include medicine capsules, 
photographic plate coatings, and dying and tanning supplies.

Background

Until the mid-nineteenth century, making gelatin was a
laborious
task. Calves' feet were loaded into a large
kettle
that was then placed over a fire. The feet were boiled for several hours after 
which the liquid was strained and the bones were discarded. After setting
for 24 hours, a layer of fat would rise to the top. This was skimmed off and 
discarded. Sweeteners and or flavorings were added to the liquid and it was
poured into
molds
and allowed again to set.

By the 1840s, however, some producers were
grinding
the set gelatin into a fine powder or cutting it into sheets. One of them was 
Charles B. Knox, a
salesman
from Johnston, New York, who hit on the idea of making gelatin more convenient 
after watching his wife Rose make it in their kitchen. Knox packaged dried
sheets of gelatin and then hired salesmen to travel door-to-door to show women 
how to add liquid to the sheets and use it to make aspics, molds, and desserts.
In 1896, Rose Knox published Dainty Desserts, a book of recipes using Knox 
gelatin.

The first patent for a
gelatin dessert
was issued in 1845 to
industrialist
and inventor Peter Cooper. Cooper had already made a name for himself as the 
inventor of the Tom Thumb steam engine. He had also made a fortune in the 
manufacture
of
glue,
a process similar to that for making gelatin.

In 1897, Pearl B. Wait, a carpenter and
cough
medicine manufacturer, developed a fruit-flavored gelatin. His wife, May Davis 
Wait, named his product Jell-O. The new product was not immediately popular
and Wait sold the rights to the process to Orator Francis Woodward, owner of 
the Genesee Food Company, for $450. Sales continued to
limp
along until 1902 when an aggressive advertising campaign in Ladies Home Journal 
magazine generated enormous interest. Sales jumped to $250,000.

The use of gelatin in food preparation increased six-fold in the 40-year period 
from 1936-1976. Today, 400 million packages of Jello-O are produced each
year. Over a million packages are purchased or eaten each day.

In the field of photography, gelatin was introduced in the late 1870s as a 
substitute for wet
collodion.
It was used to coat dry photographic plates, marking the beginning of modern 
photographic methods. Gelatin's use in the manufacture of medicinal capsules
occurred in the twentieth century.

Raw Materials

Animal bones, skins, and tissue are obtained from slaughterhouses. Gelatin 
processing plants are usually located nearby so that these animal byproducts
can be quickly processed.

Acids and alkalines such as
caustic lime
or sodium carbonate are used to extract minerals and bacteria from the animal 
parts. They are either produced in the food processing plant or purchased
from outside vendors.

Sweeteners, flavorings, and colorings are added in the preparation of food 
gelatin. These can be in liquid or powdered forms and are purchased from outside
vendors.

The Manufacturing
Process

Inspection and cutting
* When the animal parts arrive at the food processing plant, they are inspected 
for quality. Rotted parts are discarded. Then, the bones, tissues, and skins
are loaded into
chopping
machines that cut the parts into small pieces of about Sin (12.7cm) in diameter.

Degreasing and roasting
* The animal parts are passed under high-pressure water
sprays
to wash away debris. They are then degreased by
soaking
them in hot water to reduce the fat content to about 2%. A conveyer belt moves 
the degreased bones and skins to an industrial
dryer
where they are roasted for approximately 30 minutes at about 200° F (100° C).

Acid and akaline treatment
* The animal parts are
soaked
in vats of lime or some other type of acid or akali for approximately five 
days. This process removes most of the minerals and bacteria and facilitates
the release of collagen. The acid wash is typically a 4%
hydrochloric acid
with a pH of less than 1.5. The alkaline wash is a potassium or sodium 
carbonate with a pH above 7.

Boiling
* The pieces of bone, tissue, and skin are loaded into large aluminum 
extractors and boiled in
distilled water.
A tube running from the extractor allows workers to draw off the liquid that 
now contains gelatin. The liquid is
sterilized
by flash-heating it to about 375° F (140° C) for approximately four seconds.

Evaporating and grinding
* From the extractor, the liquid is piped through filters to separate out bits 
of bone, tissue or skin that are still attached. From the filters, the liquid
is piped into evaporators, machines that separate the liquid from the solid 
gelatin. The liquid is piped out and discarded. The gelatin is passed through
machines that press it into sheets. Depending on its final application, the 
gelatin sheets are passed through a
grinder
that reduces them to a fine powder.

Flavoring and coloring
* If the gelatin is to be used by the food industry, sweeteners, flavorings, 
and colorings may be added at this point. Pre-set amounts of these additives
are thoroughly mixed into the powdered gelatin.

Packaging

The packaging process is automated, with
preset
amounts of gelatin poured into overhead funnels through which the gelatin flows 
down into bags made of either
polypropylene
or multi-ply paper. The bags are then vacuumed sealed.

Quality Control

Gelatin manufacturers must adhere to
stringent
national and international food processing requirements. These regulations 
include but are not limited to cleanliness of the plant, equipment and 
employees;
and allowable percentages of additives, flavorings, and colorings.

Automated and computerized technologies allow the processors to preset and 
monitor ingredient amounts, time and temperature, acidity and
alkalinity,
and flow levels. Valves are installed along pipelines to allow for continuous 
sampling of the product.

Gelatin is processed to varying "bloom" values that measure the
gel strength
or firmness. The desired strength corresponds to the manner in which the 
gelatin will be used. The bloom value is technically measured and monitored 
throughout
the production process.

The Future

Since 1986 when the presence of
bovine spongiform encephalopathy
(BSE), also known as mad cow disease, was reported in Great Britain, there has 
been much concern about the processing of beef bones for the production of
gelatin. In 1989, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned 
the importation of cattle from the Department of Agriculture's list of of
BSE-designated countries. However, a 1994 FDA ruling allowed the continued 
importation of bones and tissues for the production of pharmaceutical grade
gelatin.

By 1997, however, the FDA held hearings to
reconsider
its decision. After interviewing gelatin processors, the agency found that 
while gelatin has not been implicated in the spread of BSE, officials are not
convinced that the manufacturing processing is extracting all possible agents 
that are responsible for the disease. It was generally agreed that beef sources
carry more of a risk than those from pork, that bones carry a higher risk than 
skins, and that
alkaline
processing is more effective than the acid-extraction method. These findings 
will certainly affect the gelatin-processing industry in the next century.



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