Total solids content in food raw materials
Standard Total solids, dry matter content in food raw materials In this article, I will try to collect standardized and real Total Solids for all… Read More »Total solids content in food raw materials
Total solids in the food industry refer to the sum of all solid material present in a food product after the complete removal of water and other volatile substances under specified drying conditions. It is expressed as a percentage of the product’s total weight and includes all non-water components: proteins, carbohydrates, fats, minerals, fibers, salts, and other dissolved or suspended solids. TS of food raw materials are here.
Measurement Methods
Gravimetric Oven-Drying Method (Most Common)
Sample weighed → dried at 105 °C ± 2 °C in a convection or vacuum oven until constant weight is achieved → cooled in a desiccator → weighed again. Loss in mass = water content; remainder = total solids.
Vacuum Oven Method
Lower temperatures (60–70 °C) under reduced pressure; used for heat-sensitive foods.
Infrared Drying
Rapid drying using IR heat; results comparable to oven method.
Refractometry
Measures soluble solids (°Brix), often used for syrups, fruit juices — note: measures soluble solids, not total solids unless insolubles are negligible.
Microwave Drying
Fast method using microwave energy to evaporate water.
Industry Examples
Maple Syrup – must have ≥ 66% total solids (mostly sugars) to meet legal definition.
Milk – typically ~12–13% total solids (fat, protein, lactose, minerals).
Tomato Paste – high-quality paste: ≥ 28% total solids.
Fruit Jam – regulated to have ≥ 68% soluble solids (close to TS if pectin & fiber included).
Chocolate Syrup – TS determines viscosity and sweetness.
Standard Total solids, dry matter content in food raw materials In this article, I will try to collect standardized and real Total Solids for all… Read More »Total solids content in food raw materials