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Humidity levels for spice storage

Started by , Jul 10 2019 12:49 PM
5 Replies

Hi everyone I have a question to everyone working in the spice & seasoning industry.

 

We all know spices tend to clump after a while and this is due to absorption of moisture from the surroundings. Our corrective action is to monitor humidity by checking the humidity meters. My question is what would the limits be? When you monitor something you need to establish limits,(this isn't a CCP) does anyone have any knowledge of how would the humidity levels not be above and below how much? Also our suppliers of the material don't have this on their specification sheets.  I have been trying to search the internet with no luck. Any help would be appreciated! 

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Maybe it's not due to absorption of moisture in the surrounding air?

I thought of it but after research and knowledge it is mainly due to humidity, especially since we're in a humid, hot Florida.

The reason I question the humidity hypothesis is because I can't understand why paprika clumps more quickly than, say, ground cumin.  And how does adding a very small amount of SiO2 prevent clumping?  Maybe the spice itself is releasing resins or oils, and gluing itself together?  Maybe the SiO2 prevents clumping by absorbing these exudates?

I believe it differs from spice to spice depending on the particle size/surface area and amount of essential oils present just as you mentioned it releases oils over time.

The Handbook of Spices, Seasonings, and Flavorings says spices should be stored at 50° to 60° F and 55% to 65% relative humidity.  If paprika (for instance) is kept too dry, it will lose its ASTA color faster.  Swings in temperature and humidity will accelerate the clumping. 

 

All together, this caking issue is too tricky to be dealt with by calling humidity monitoring a Corrective Action.  It is not preventative either, not a Preventive Control and not a Preventive Action.  Caking can be forestalled by mechanical means, such as having the warehouse guys restack the bags roughly.   A better solution is to use a JIT supplier for the raw materials that you know to clump, and to add 1% to 2% SiO2 to your finished product.

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