Why the Phl needs food technologists not culinary graduates
After high school at St. Scholastica’s College, my younger sister Medy chose Food Technology as a career, while I did BA Nutrition. Culinary arts did not attract our generation. Today, there is a glut of colleges offering the so-called Hotel and Restaurant Management (HRM). CHED considered a moratorium on this program.
Both Department of Agriculture and Department of Science and Technology have been sorely amiss in working with CHED to match the need for labor force that would feed 100 million Filipinos. Hunger is a threat in our unstoppable population growth. Urgently needed are agronomists, food technologists, and biotech researchers.
The contents of this article are the experiences of my sister Medy Laquindanum, who did BS Food Technology at University of the Philippines, and MS Food Science at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, under Fulbright Hays Scholarship. She had trainings at UN FAO seminars on Food Export and Food Engineering in Malaysia and India. She was Research Leader, then Research and Development Manager and Technical Manager from 1972 to 1995 in California Manufacturing, now Unilever Foods. She was Assistant College Dean of the O.B. Montessori College, College Dean of Istituto Culinario, and now, OBMC registrar from 1995 to 2014.
Employment demands of multinational companies
Armed with a Master in Food Science on a Fulbright scholarship, the University of the Philippines became my launching pad into the Philippine food industry. I answered a blind ad for a food technologist for what turned out to be a multinational company based in Mindanao. Thinking my prospective employer will not yield to my asking price of four times my UP salary, I was flabbergasted to know they called my bluff.
So off I trained in the pineapple tables, conveyor belts running one peeled and cored fruit cylinder per second (around 20 tables in all). I sorted out blemished slices and off-center cores to select the best quality for whole fruit slices or chunks. Trimmings or seconds went to crush varieties. The skin was squeezed for juice from which vinegar or recovered syrup was made. The pulp went to cattle feed. No part of the pineapple was wasted.
To think that my university laboratory classes had five students working on one fruit for three hours showed me the wonders of food engineering, the assembly line, cost and labor saving devices but still maintaining the industry’s high standards of quality.
The need for huge volume of agriculture products
It’s not only big industry that needs food technologists. In fact, big business will not thrive if small or cottage industries cannot survive. One such example is the strawberry supplier from Baguio, who had to deliver tons of his produce to a jam processor in Manila. To survive the overnight trip from the farm using the baggage compartment of a transport bus, the supplier would boil the fruits with sugar, pack them hot in plastic lined 5-gallon pails and send them to the bus station for delivery 300 km away to Metro Manila for final processing and bottling. It turned out pre-cooking could be eliminated and alternate packing of fresh fruits with refined sugar was sufficient to protect the strawberries for transport before freezing or preserves cooking. Eliminating the boiling operation not only cut labor and energy cost but improved quality as well.
Forget organic food, free-range chicken or fresh tilapia swimming in an aquarium. The Filipino food supply can be affordable and just as nutritionally sound with a little help from the Food Technologist. Canned foods can be a bargain such as canned sardines and tuna. They have the same protein content as the clear-eyed freshly caught lapu-lapu and are so easy to prepare. Likewise, frozen galunggong vs. fresh ones. Of course free-range chickens are happier than those raised in factory farms. They are also kept free of hormones and are less-likely to carry communicable bacteria, which are common in crowded poultry pens. If you can afford to pay the difference then go ahead and opt for pricier organic meats.
Pickles? They’re loaded with salt but high in vitamin K according to Dr. Mehmet Oz in Time Magazine, and the vinegar in them can preserve the meat or spread you add it in. It is one way of preserving the once-a-year cucumber harvest in salt stock, making the relish available for 12 months in sandwiches and salads.
The cucumber planters of Bulacan and Nueva Ecija can be revived if taught to salt and ferment their harvest in brine. After fermentation and curing for 4 to 6 weeks, the salt content of the brine is gradually increased to 15 to 16% salt (60 to 66 degrees salometer). With proper care the cucumber may be held in this brine almost indefinitely or even sold for export as India does. Cured cucumber is desalted and packed in spiced sweet vinegar as needed for use as sandwich relish, salad ingredient and in many of our sweet-sour meat dishes such as embotido or morcon.
Extending the shelf life of peanuts, mangoes, squash and tomatoes
Peanut butter is a source of quality nutrition. Eight percent of its total fats are unsaturated like olive oil. It is also high in protein, fiber and potassium. And again, it extends the shelf-life of shelled peanuts. Our peanut farmers need assistance from the Department of Agriculture in the proper post-harvest storage of the crop, to prevent mold infestation that result in production of the carcinogenic aflatoxin. Otherwise, the Philippines will continue to depend on China and Vietnam for importation of peanuts. Our country is a paradise of tropical fruits. We have made inroads in the dried mango exports. So why can’t we do the same for dried fruit mixes of pineapple and papaya and banana figs or chips. All these value-added processed crops will be a big boost for our farmers, not to mention dietary sources of fiber, vitamin A, vitamin C and potassium.
Some of the exotic and delightful preserves I have tasted are santol and calamansi marmalade, langka or jackfruit and guava jelly or jam. Forget blueberry, raspberry or peaches. Following American practice, fruits are preserved in plastic-lined 10-15 kg tins or cartons and preserved in freezing storage until used for jams or preserves. Less energy consuming fruit stocks are packed in barrels and preserved with fruit acid or vinegar or dilute sulfur dioxide solution which are rinsed or boiled out of the fruit almost completely in making preserves.
Other highly nutritious crops are tomatoes and squash. Some entrepreneur should look into local sun-dried tomatoes, which contain lycopene, a powerful antioxidant that helps fight disease and inflammation. The squash can also be a good medium for sauces. Unlike the banana, we don’t need to disguise it with artificial red color because of its attractive orange carotene pigment.
Need the assistance of the Department of Agriculture again for post-harvest handling and storage
For crops of high commercial value, there is no excuse why the Filipino housewife should be manipulated by conniving traders of garlic, onions and ginger. We just need the assistance of the Department of Agriculture again for their post-harvest handling and storage.
A word of caution about food processing – sanitation. We cannot export or compete even with our ASEAN neighbors if insect fragments or rodents’ hair are found in our patis, bagoong or dried fish. It’s a pity because fish sauce has been tapped by Europeans as alternate to the controversial monosodium glutamate. I have seen concrete vats of patis fermentation left unattended after being packed with fish and salt. Even flies are not kept away from bagoong earthen jars. The neighborhood cat and dog are also allowed to rest or play on drying racks when empty. Quality control should not be neglected even for the poor man’s diet.
What makes the food industry major employer
Adults and even children in early grade school can easily comprehend how much employment is available in the country if taught that we are both producers and consumers at the same time.
A bowl of rice, wheat (a piece of pandesal) is grown by the farmer. He is assisted by others who weed, water and fertilize them until they are harvested. A driver takes them to the millers. Tons of rice are either stored or placed in sacks. Several truck drivers or boat, transport them all around the country. Both small stores, market stall or supermarket sellers dispose of them to housewives, restaurants, hospitals, offices or school cafeteria, Hot or cold kitchen cooks rice cake or pastry cooks convert them into different dishes. Some of these are sold to specialty cake, bread or pastry stores. Again, delivery boys and drivers transport the goods daily. About 18 different people are to bring various food to our table.
Hundreds of kitchen helps, waiters and sellers help wash and store the equipment daily. But the major movers of the food industry are the trained agriculture workers, food merchants, food technologists and biotech researchers — the keys to feeding the world in the coming decades.
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