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"spoilage" Definitions
  1. the decay (= the process of being destroyed) of food which means that it can no longer be used

143 Sentences With "spoilage"

How to use spoilage in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "spoilage" and check conjugation/comparative form for "spoilage". Mastering all the usages of "spoilage" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Essentially, hurdle technology employs multiple food preservation techniques to combat spoilage.
By refrigerating eggs, we're really protecting against salmonella, not preventing spoilage.
You don't have to worry about spoilage or anything like that.
Power cuts in the West Bank and especially Gaza cause spoilage.
"Factors that cause spoilage are water loss and oxidation," Rogers told TechCrunch.
The rejected shipments had metal can defects which could lead to spoilage.
But fermentation remains a messy process, and one prone to spoilage and waste.
For that matter, they'll need less refrigeration because they're less prone to spoilage.
It also must be packaged in hermetically sealed containers, to prevent leaks and spoilage.
The vaccines in question had been stored without appropriate temperature control to prevent spoilage.
Check food for visible signs of spoilage, smell it, and taste a small amount.
After researching the issue, he realized spoilage was at the root of the problem.
Oh, and it's not even good at doing what it's supposed to do: prevent food spoilage.
You'll read about underreported problems, like how mold and food spoilage are likely to plague Houston.
These companies recognized that fresh and immediately frozen products limit spoilage and allows for much easier transport.
With short distances from point to point, concerns about long delivery runs and food spoilage are minimal.
Given the somewhat confusing new primary system, it was widely anticipated that there'd be some ballot spoilage.
Russian authorities intimated that it could have come from "deliberate spoilage," but stopped short of making direct accusations.
It's usually deployed to protect food, preserve freshness, and prevent spoilage and waste, which are all good things.
Food spoilage – think the kind of science experiment-type molds you find in your Tupperware — isn't the fear.
The bottom line: Small farmers may lose as much as 25% of their annual income due to spoilage.
If they splurge for meat, fresh fruits or vegetables at the grocery store, spoilage may take its toll.
The camera is designed to help monitor spoilage, letting you eye a particular bowl of leftovers without opening the door.
"Salt is a significant factor in minimizing spoilage," according to the National Milk Producers Federation and International Dairy Foods Association.
But some organisms that promote spoilage survive, and the milk will spoil after 14 to 21 days in the refrigerator.
In the past, Muke and her peers lost much of their fresh produce through spoilage due to hot tropical conditions.
The safety board declined to characterize which investigations had been most impaired by passage of time and spoilage of evidence.
The creators of Sweeper hope the robot will not only help counteract the farming labor shortage, but also reduce food spoilage.
But transporting milk safely and easily with traditional open milk pails comes with spillage, spoilage and an increased risk of contamination.
Further, I do happen to be an angler, and I prefer to capture my quarry alive, and free of chemical spoilage.
Spoilage is a global problem, the U.N.'s Food & Agriculture Organization says, with about one-third of the world's food wasted.
TAPE A THERMOMETER inside your cooler, and return dishes there between servings to keep them fresh and cool, and prevent spoilage.
He ground up much of it and mixed it with a fresh, red meat in an attempt to mask the spoilage.
They're also shelf-stable, so no need to worry about spoilage if they live in my desk drawer for a while.
Turns out our ancestors stumbled onto something magical: Salt preserves the meat by sucking the water out, retarding spoilage and concentrating flavor.
Shipping takes two to three days, and the wheel can only be ordered on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays to avoid weekend spoilage.
Why it's a big deal: Because food waste costs an estimated $2.6 trillion per year, much of which is because of spoilage.
However, the most recent reports suggest that the ballot spoilage rate is surprisingly low — in the range of 3 to 4 percent.
Other food spoilage-tracking apps exist, but the Ovie line seems to be the most immediately visual when you open up your fridge.
What to Tell Your FriendIf the OJ is store-bought, take a whiff or sip to see how much spoilage has set in.
No wine producer would ever want "vinegar" to be associated with a wine; it generally indicates spoilage and would indeed be a flaw.
She helped us out with spoilage ranges for some of our favorite Seamless orders and also offered some general advice — namely trust yourself.
"This allows the kitchen and the bar a greater breadth of potential creativity, while cutting down on spoilage and food cost," she says.
The U.S.D.A., however, defines "cured" meats as only those that are preserved with synthetic nitrites — salt-based preservatives that prevent spoilage and browning.
By coating the fruit and vegetables in the substance, the rate of water loss and oxidation — the main causes of spoilage — is reduced.
It may be used again after fermentation to prevent oxidation and microbiological spoilage in the wine, and again before bottling as a stabilizer.
"I know our mother's and grandmother's obsessions with food going bad, or as they called it 'spoilage,' haunts me to this day," she says.
And wait to wash your vegetables until just before you cut -- washing before storing may promote bacterial growth and speed up spoilage, Magee said.
If something has visible mold, off odors, the can is bulging or other similar signs, this spoilage could indicate the presence of dangerous microorganisms.
Using a database of food spoilage times, the company says it can alert you when your produce or meal is about to go bad.
"Refrigerating commercial mayonnaise after opening has more to do with quality and extending its shelf life than it does with spoilage," the company said.
Kuvee's changing the way consumers drink wine by offering a patented wine bottle that keeps the oxygen out of an open bottle, preventing spoilage.
You will regularly re-wet the sacks in the nearest creek, blotting the excess blood off the raw cuts daily to slow down spoilage.
It could go inside a factory and smell products for quality control or be put inside a grain silo to smell for food spoilage.
The Bolthouse Farms business recalled 3.8 million bottles of protein drinks due to possible spoilage last month after receiving complaints including reports of illness.
Store and cook food at the right temperatures, and keep a close watch for mold or spoilage — even with shelf-stable food, Pike said.
Maersk has responded with a $1,000-per-container fee for electricity to prevent spoilage before trucks can be found to ship the food inland.
It also means less spoilage, allowing you to enjoy produce when it's close to its nutritional best -- that is, whenever you decide to consume it.
"The two leading causes of produce spoilage are water loss and oxidation — that's water evaporating out of the produce and oxygen getting in," Rogers says.
The Spoiler Alert platform becomes, essentially, a secondary marketplace for wholesale food, Ashenfelter said, including ugly produce and products that are ripening and approaching spoilage.
At the point that the grain reaches physiological maturity, it can contain 40 percent moisture, making it exquisitely susceptible to chametz and spoilage in storage.
With Kuvée, you can enjoy a glass of cab on Saturday, sauvignon blanc on Sunday, and a pinot on Monday, and never worry about spoilage.
In this case, Urushido and Jimenez added a little bit of eau de vie, a colorless brandy, to up the ABV and protect it from spoilage.
Tupperware was invented to keep food from spoiling, but Americans still waste 30 to 40 percent of their food due to spoilage, according to the USDA.
Problems during the required sterilization process at a co-packing facility (which is not under Bumble Bee's management) prompted concerns around possible spoilage due to contamination.
"If made correctly, if all the conditions are correct post-baking, I once had a panettone last eight months without molding or spoilage," Mr. Lahey said.
These storms can last for days or weeks, and depending on the season, we've had to deal with freezing temperatures, food spoilage, and — gasp — no internet.
Food safety pros recommend avoiding dairy products like yogurt, cottage cheese and ice cream on planes because they are particularly susceptible to spoilage when not kept cold.
The company has developed packaging inserts that, through the magic of basic chemistry, can ward off fungus and mold and slow the spoilage of fruits and vegetables.
Food additives like preservatives, which can be artificial or natural, serve the purpose of preventing the ingredients in the food from spoilage, deterioration, discoloration and bacterial contamination.
Because of the lag time in reaching consumers, the produce is picked long before ripening, to reduce spoilage on the way, chefs and agricultural experts here said.
This allows you to enjoy different bottles by the glass, so you won't have to feel pressured to finish them right away for fear of immediate spoilage.
As printers get cheaper, they'll no doubt begin to appear in pharmacies, which will print pills only as needed, cutting down on costly waste, spoilage and storage.
For example, temperature and humidity can be used to model spoilage while other standard metrics can actually tell businesses which box in a stack contains their products.
Vertically farmed produce can be either exotic varietals or local favorites, does not need to be engineered to reduce spoilage during transport and is incredibly water efficient.
Imperial Choice Mandarin Oranges Broken Segments in Light Syrup are being recalled because the cans might bulge, burst or leak, and spoilage organisms might have contaminated the products.
The business, however, has struggled in recent years, with issues ranging from farming missteps to the recall of 3.8 million bottles of protein shakes due to possible spoilage.
The heat-causing capsicums have become a dietary staple in cultures all over the world, valued for their flavor and ability to prevent food spoilage in hot climates.
The edible, plant-based spray creates a layer of plant matter on the avocado's shell that slows the rates of dehydration and oxidation—the primary causes of spoilage.
As long as the packaging isn't damaged, because most rations from the Korean War era and before were dehydrated, spoilage is arrested and pathogens aren't able to grow.
As a result of less food spoilage, low-income rural families are able to save over 5 percent of monthly incomes, Evaptainer said, citing field tests conducted in Morocco.
There's hope for a tastier, healthier, more robust tomorrow: high-tech new food preservation methods that fend off the bad stuff (bacteria, spoilage) while protecting the good (flavor, texture, nutrients).
Now agents can text farmers to ensure that their crops are in demand, free of spoilage and using the right levels of pesticides for their end market, said King-Bischof.
Bumble Bee Foods has issued a nationwide recall of 31,579 cases of its 5oz canned Chunk Light Tuna due to "spoilage organisms or pathogens" that could lead to serious illness.
Food spoilage happens, even in the fridge (Remember that science experiment mentioned earlier?), but colder temperatures will stop the growth or spread of salmonella, which can spread at room temperature.
" The Roscosmos chief said the defect may have occurred on Earth during the manufacturing process, but he didn't rule out other possibilities, such as an ISS astronaut causing "deliberate spoilage.
Public wants and can afford to buy — preventing waste and spoilage of food — in short, the job was to help all sorts of Americans to live healthily, economically and well.
Walmart was sued on Wednesday by a Silicon Valley company that accused the largest U.S. retailer of stealing its technology to prolong the shelf life of produce and reduce spoilage.
"Transportation is more difficult because fresh fruit and vegetables need more space and are often more difficult to stack and they need to be cooled to prevent spoilage," Simmet added.
To prevent such spoilage, maybe HBO will continue to release the names after the episodes air, so there's no chance of any of the fans getting too ahead of the curve.
"These deviations were part of the commercial sterilization process and could result in contamination by spoilage organisms or pathogens, which could lead to life-threatening illness if consumed," the FDA said.
The in-house labs are particularly attractive to wine companies, which can use them to test for spoilage organisms at individual wineries rather than having to ship samples out for testing.
Kleiss runs a propane-fuelled grain dryer continuously to avoid spoilage of his crop and his propane costs will double to about $60,000 to dry a quarter-million bushels of corn.
Andreescu's paper test can measure different toxins, and the intensity of the colors that come up on the sensors indicate the concentration of the analyte, which indicates spoilage or other factors.
Remarkably, this environmentally benevolent wrap works better than plastic: "The protein-based films are powerful oxygen blockers that help prevent food spoilage," Dr. Peggy Tomasula, who also led the research, explained.
And the worst part about staph is that you can't tell if your food has been infected; there's no signs of spoilage such as a bad smell or funny color change.
Globally, two billion tests are done annually for pathogens and spoilage organisms, and the rate is growing at about 27 percent a year, said Thomas R. Weschler, founder of Strategic Consulting Inc.
"Food fraud, food safety and food spoilage all along the local to global farm-to-table distribution network will be managed by blockchain data pipelines in the very near future", he says.
About that adventure, I won't say much, though it strikes me that the shape of the plot is less vulnerable to spoilage than the little winks and local surprises along the way.
There are two things that keep us from eating food after it's been in the fridge for days: actual spoilage, or no longer being appealing because it's been sitting around for too long.
If baseball has missed anything these past few decades, it's round guys whose only job is to bat once a game and make sure the team minimizes food spoilage in the clubhouse spread.
While believers accept these prohibitions as divine edicts to prove devotion, some scholars speculate that they developed as health measures to prevent spoilage of meat, which is accelerated through oxidation and bacterial growth.
Customers also can purchase add-ons like hired and non-owned auto insurance, employment practices liability insurance (EPLI), liquor liability insurance, employee dishonesty coverage, professional liability insurance, equipment breakdown coverage and spoilage coverage.
"These deviations were part of the commercial sterilization process and could result in contamination by spoilage organisms or pathogens, which could lead to life-threatening illness if consumed," the companies said in separate statements.
If you reduce the third of food waste and spoilage- 27% in the developed world in the industrialized countries between retail and garbage cans, then you could feed every hungry person in the world.
The California-based startup is combating food waste by using plant-derived materials from food itself to create an extra protective barrier to prolong its life and stave off spoilage — essentially, creating a second peel.
Though there are products that work with organic spices to purportedly prevent food spoilage, professors at Ben Gurion University Arie Markus and Charles Linder headed up research and development team to create Phresh's specific powder.
Del Monte's fiesta corn seasoned with red and green peppers is under-processed and could result in, "contamination by spoilage organisms or pathogens, which could lead to life-threatening illness if consumed," the company said.
These provisions can be negotiated out entirely, or in the least the difference between a franchisee committing fraud and events beyond the owner's direct control, like the spoilage example, can be successfully written into the agreement.
According to CEO Peggs, raising at least some crops close to where they will be eaten helps reduce the food damage and spoilage that occurs during shipping from a point of harvest to a faraway destination.
WINNIPEG/CHICAGO (Reuters) - North America's wettest harvest in about five years is hiking farmers' costs as they dry crops to avoid spoilage and forcing them to take price discounts that are pinching incomes already under stress.
Researchers at Clarkson University have developed low-cost, portable, paper-based sensor labels that they hope will be able to detect food spoilage, authenticate tea and wine, and even identify new medicinal plants in remote jungles.
Smaller wineries may lack resources or expertise to negotiate additional coverage for issues such as spoilage caused by utility failures, which is typically subject to far lower limits than other parts of a policy, Aon's Pagano said.
The tool can be configured in a variety of ways so this same technology could potentially be used to predict machine break-downs in a manufacturing facility or food spoilage in a supermarket, as a couple of examples.
They were added to prevent spoilage and to create better texture, yet the Food and Drug Administration ruled artificial trans fat to be unsafe in 2015 and gave food manufacturers three years to remove them from their products.
A further $180 million was pledged by the Rockefeller Foundation, including $130 million for AGRA's Yieldwise initiative to strengthen crop storage, handling and processing capabilities to reduce significant post-harvest losses on African farms due spoilage or pests.
"3D printing technology constitutes the perfect opportunity to eliminate inefficiencies across the food market by dramatically reducing food spoilage during the supply chain while bolstering the consumer's ability to personalize according to her wants and needs," he says.
Plastics are most decidedly not the way of the future for several reasons: They create a massive amount of waste, they're not actually that great at preventing spoilage, and they may very well be lousy for your health.
The powder in the sachets purportedly delays spoilage of many fruits and vegetables (the list includes strawberries, potatoes and tomatoes and the company plans to continue testing to increase that list) for, in some cases, almost a full month.
The same can be said for frozen veggies, which are initially blanched to inactivate enzymes that would otherwise break down nutrients and then frozen to stop bacterial spoilage, versus the natural degradation and rotting that occurs in fresh produce.
Apeel Sciences, the developer of a new technology that makes fruits and vegetables more resistant to spoilage, and Nature's Pride, one of the largest vendors of avocados and mangos in Europe, are partnering to bring longer-lived avocados to market.
His company produces a plant-based coating that comes in powder form and, when applied with water, can double the shelf life of fruit and vegetables without refrigeration so farmers in remote areas can get them to market without spoilage.
Compare the mattress industry to the meal kit delivery business which had to contend with a wide variety of substitute food products, from Domino's to DoorDash and supermarkets to Soylent — not to mention spoilage, high levels of customer churn, etc.
James Rogers wanted to find a way to slow down the rate of food spoilage, so in 13 he founded Apeel Sciences with a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to produce a barrier out of edible plant materials.
Blue Apron works hard to make the process as efficient as possible; it consorts with individual farmers to tie recipes to their output, times its supply chain to ensure minimal spoilage, and aligns its meal schedule with produce that's seasonally available.
Using chemical compounds will not only prevent food spoilage that occurs during the transportation of crops and animal products, it can feed more people, help farmers stay profitable, and save energy by reducing the use of fridges, according to This.
Del Monte recalls canned corn Del Monte's fiesta corn seasoned with red and green peppers is under-processed and could result in, "contamination by spoilage organisms or pathogens, which could lead to life-threatening illness if consumed," the company said.
VinEdge Wine Preserver With a no-drip pour spout and a disposable tube that inflates in the bottle while you pour, this kit creates a barrier to block air from wine to prevent spoilage so you can enjoy it for longer.
An almost-spherical shape meant that balls of Edam could easily fit into barrels for shipping, and it prevented bits of the cheese from breaking off during transit, which can ruin cheese by exposing its interior to maggots and spoilage.
Details of what the company's actually up to are pretty sketchy on the website, but it seems like the company will be using existing sensor networks and some sort of machine learning system to more efficiently deliver food to prevent spoilage. Xapix.
Say a food location had a rogue manager who wasn't keeping the refrigerator at the right temperature which resulted in spoilage, and then health violations, and ultimately doomed the unit, but all of the other locations the franchisee owns are running smoothly.
When it comes to shipping, for example, he'd said that if a company has a claim or multiple claims around food spoilage with a certain shipper or region, similar instances can be avoided by planning around those situations with recommendations from Corvus .
In simple terms, the structure of these casein-based films blocks oxygen, the primary catalyst of spoilage, up to 250 times better than conventional plastic—so in addition to being edible and biodegradable, the packaging could lead to dramatic reductions in food waste.
While the company is on a mission to reduce food spoilage in places where sustenance is hard to come by, it is operating as a for-profit, for-good business with five employees in North America and two in North Africa at this time.
Examples include: FLASH Robotics' "social robot" EMYS that teaches kids how to speak a new language; Amber Agriculture's bean-shaped sensors that monitor corn in silos, and help farmers prevent spoilage;  Japet's "exoskeleton" that promises to relieve back pain; and Beetl's yard-cleaning, cloud connected robots.
And because he cannot use a fumigant to kill off the navel orangeworm, a pest that works its way into almonds after they are harvested, he ships the nuts to a freezing facility that normally flash-freezes freshly harvested broccoli, cauliflower and bell peppers to prevent spoilage.
These days, of course, science has removed most of the risks of spoilage with dry ice and jet travel, as well as most of the fun from the lives of oysters with asexual triploid reproduction and year-round farming, so they probably want us to eat them, really.
On Wednesday, the FSIS announced that Valley Fine Foods had recalled "approximately 35,516 pounds of heat-treated, not fully cooked meat and poultry products" due to concerns the products might contain "spoilage organisms that have rendered it unwholesome and unfit for human food," according to a press release.
As far as food spoilage is concerned, these sensors would bind to the reactive oxygen species that rotting foods accumulate over time and would, for example, tell consumers when to throw out that yogurt that doesn't smell too bad but has been in their fridge for way too long.
"If climate change brings extreme changes in weather, such as floods, some crops and food products may be more vulnerable to spoilage - and those products may end up in the food chain, which (raises) the food safety issue," said Silvia Alonso Alvarez, an epidemiologist at the Kenya-based International Livestock Research Institute.
What that means is that, hey, maybe you will have to go back to dealing with food the way people have for millennia: sniffing, smelling, touching, and actually understanding a thing or two about the signs of spoilage, rather than blankly obeying the tyranny of the tiny black print on a bottle cap.
While consumers still have an appetite (again with the puns!) for grocery ordering and delivery plays, investors are becoming increasingly cautious in the wake of meal kit service Blue Apron's high-profile failure (among others), which emphasized challenges like scalability, the inability to patent food and spoilage and contamination concerns across the supply chain.
Counties activated their emergency centers and authorities urged people to have supplies of water for several days, to keep sensitive medicines such as insulin in cool places, to drive carefully because traffic lights could be out, to have a full gas tank for emergencies and to check the food in freezers and refrigerators for spoilage after power is restored.

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