Boil-in-bags are a form of packaged food products in which bagged food is heated or cooked in boiling water. Plastic bags can be solid and impermeable for holding frozen foods; alternatively, bags can be porous or perforated to allow boiling water into the bag.
Food packaged in this manner is often sold as boil-in-the-bag.[1]
Solid bags
editPrepared foods can be securely packed into plastic bags, frozen, and often packed into paperboard folding cartons. A consumer takes the pouch and places it into boiling water for a specified period. The bag is either cut open or can have an easy-opening feature.
Bags are usually not suited for microwave heating unless they are punctured to release pressure. Some have self-venting features.
Porous bags
editSome dry products, typically grains, are sold in perforated plastic bags and designed for convenient cooking directly in the enclosure. Upon cooking food can be drained easily by removal of bag from water, without use of additional kitchen utensils.
The most popular product sold as boil-in-bag is rice, but other cereals like pearl barley or pseudocereals like buckwheat are also available.
Typically, temperature-resistant, perforated polypropylene bags are used as food enclosures.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Scotland in the 60s: Food". BBC. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
...convenience foods became more popular. You could buy almost any kind of food in tins, frozen, in boil-in-the-bag packets or in dried packet meals.
Further reading
edit- Yam, K. L., "Encyclopedia of Packaging Technology", John Wiley & Sons, 2009, ISBN 978-0-470-08704-6