Flavours2 224

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Flavours
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1974 (CAN) (US)
January 1975 (UK)
RecordedJuly 1974 at Sound Stage in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
GenreRock
Length40:20
LabelRCA Records
ProducerJack Richardson
The Guess Who chronology
Road Food
(1974)
Flavours
(1974)
Power in the Music
(1975)
Singles from Flavours
  1. 'Dancin' Fool'
    Released: October 1974
  2. 'Loves Me Like a Brother'
    Released: 1975

5 reviews of Flavour 'I now know where a really hip dressin friend of mine gets his duds! Ha, I have discovered his secret source. This is a cool store for funky sweaters and jackets. Some decent sale items too. You can't go wrong with a store that has ginormous. A restaurant is a place where many people come and eat. It is important to follow certain rules so that everyone in the restaurant will have a pleasant dining experience.

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Christgau's Record GuideC[2]

Flavours24 is a chain of Frozen Dessert Parlours, serving mouthwatering treats like Froyo (frozen yogurt), Parfait, Milkshake and Slush. A brand to introduce ‘YoBun', a delicious yogurt burger for. Latest Styles In Men's Clothing Featuring On-Trend Men's Fashion And Clothing, A Summer Inspired Range. Free Delivery Available.

Flavours is the thirteenth studio album by the Canadian rock band The Guess Who. This was the first album by the group to feature Domenic Troiano on guitar.

Release history[edit]

In addition to the usual 2 channel stereo version the album was also released by RCA in a 4 channel quadraphonic version on both LP and 8-track tape. The quad LP version was released using the Quadradisc system.

The album was first released on CD in a 'Two-Fer' series, bundled with the album Rockin', although this release was criticized by multiple reviewers for poor sound quality. In 2011, the album was released in remastered form by the Iconoclassic label including previously unreleased demo tracks.

Track listing[edit]

All songs written by Burton Cummings and Domenic Troiano.

Flavours 2 224 tahun
  1. 'Dancin' Fool' – 3:34
  2. 'Hoe Down Time' – 3:52
  3. 'Nobody Knows His Name' – 3:19
  4. 'Diggin' Yourself' – 3:42
  5. 'Seems Like I Can't Live with You, But I Can't Live Without You' – 5:28
  6. 'Dirty' – 5:30
  7. 'Eye' – 3:57
  8. 'Loves Me Like a Brother' – 3:26
  9. 'Long Gone' – 7:59
224
  1. 'Dancin' Fool' – 3:34
  2. 'Hoe Down Time' – 3:52
  3. 'Nobody Knows His Name' – 3:19
  4. 'Diggin' Yourself' – 3:42
  5. 'Seems Like I Can't Live with You, But I Can't Live Without You' – 5:28
  6. 'Dirty' – 5:30
  7. 'Eye' – 3:57
  8. 'Loves Me Like a Brother' – 3:26
  9. 'Long Gone' – 7:59

2011 Iconoclassic remaster bonus tracks:

  • 10. 'A Fool, a Fool, I Met a Fool' (Demo) – 4:09
  • 11. 'Save a Smile' (Demo) – 2:58
  • 12. 'Roll with the Punches' (Demo) – 4:49
  • 13. 'Your Back Yard' (Demo) – 4:04

Personnel[edit]

  • Burton Cummings – lead vocals, keyboards
  • Domenic Troiano – guitar, backing vocals
  • Bill Wallace – bass, backing vocals
  • Garry Peterson – drums
  • Jack Richardson – producer
  • Dennis Smith – engineer[3]

Flavours 2 224 Pounds

Charts[edit]

Album

Flavours 2 224 +

YearChartPeak Position
1974Billboard 20048
1975Australia (Kent Music Report)[4]81

Singles

YearSingleChartPosition
1975'Dancin' Fool'Canada14
Australia85
Billboard Hot 10028
'Loves Me Like a Brother'Canada21
'Seems Like I Can't Live With You,
But I Can't Live Without You'
81

References[edit]

  1. ^Flavours at AllMusic
  2. ^Christgau, Robert (1981). 'Consumer Guide '70s: G'. Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN089919026X. Retrieved February 24, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
  3. ^The Guess Who, Flavours Chart Position Retrieved March 18, 2015
  4. ^Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 130. ISBN0-646-11917-6.


Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Flavours_(album)&oldid=979359328'

FLAVOURS

As nature intended

Flavourtech's Spinning Cone Column (SCC) is used by food and beverage manufacturers to naturally extract the best flavours and aromas from a wide range of products including fruit and vegetables, herbs, meat and seafood. Using only low-pressure steam and with a residence time in the SCC of just 25 seconds, we avoid any damage to thermally sensitive compounds..
The SCC is used to extract and concentrate flavour/aroma compounds contained in:

  • Fruit and vegetable juices, purees, and pulps
  • Evaporator condensate streams
  • Slurries of food processing by-products, e.g. prawn shells, fruit pomace or peel

From recovering natural aromas early in the juicing process for add-back after concentration (to produce a super-premium product), to extracting lightly coloured garlic and onion oils without 'cooked' notes, the SCC is assisting a wide range of customers throughout the world to make better products. Other applications in the flavour industry include the processing of mustard for production of premium quality Allyl Isothiocyanate as used in wasabi; strawberries for the collection of a 'true to life' natural flavour; ginger, mint and cilantro for the collection of both aqueous flavours and essential oils; and recovery of aroma from waste peel or pomace.

The high mass-transfer efficiency of the SCC, combined with its low thermal impact, make it an ideal system for capturing premium quality fruit and vegetable essences. In fact, the flavours recovered using the SCC are so faithful to the raw material, some flavour houses use SCC aromas as templates for synthetic or nature-identical flavours.

Spinning Cone Columns are installed throughout the world for the following food and beverage applications:

BENEFITS

BENEFITS OF SCC FOR EXTRACTING FRUIT AND VEGETABLE FLAVOURS

  • Fast and efficient recovery of sensitive aroma compounds
  • No heat damage to colour or flavour of the natural raw material
  • Concentration of the essence components to a high fold
  • Possibility of integrating with the Centritherm® evaporator to produce premium fruit concentrates
  • Modular system that allows add-on for capacity increases
  • Easily operated and cleaned with built-in 'Clean in Place' (CIP)

BENEFITS OF SCC FOR CONCENTRATING APPLE ESSENCE

  • Minimal thermal damage as a result of low time-temperature combinations
  • Process can be independent of the evaporator
  • The SCC can selectively modify the flavour profile of the essence collected
  • Aroma compounds may be concentrated with respect to water and other solvents, such as ethyl alcohol
  • Essence concentration to extreme levels is possible such that an essence oil is produced

APPLICATIONS

Extraction of natural flavours from fruit and vegetables

The fragile, delicate flavours of tropical fruits, such as guava, banana, mango and passionfruit, and vegetables, like tomato and cucumber, are lost or damaged in the course of conventional processing. This issue is overcome by the SCC, which can be designed to perform pasteurisation, de-aeration and aroma recovery simultaneously on many fruit and vegetable juices and purees. The juice or puree can be processed as soon as it leaves the finisher, meaning that the aroma recovered is absolutely true to the fresh raw material.

The SCC can readily handle thick, viscous purees and slurries which would be impossible to process in any other aroma recovery system. This ability makes it possible to recover entirely natural essences from strawberry, passionfruit and tomato where capturing the 'top-notes' is imperative to maintaining a complete flavour profile. In fact, all major polar and non-polar aroma and flavour compounds from banana, pineapple, berries, melons, guava, kiwi, mango, papaya, passionfruit, peach, apple and pear have been recovered using the SCC.

With the importance and demand of FTNF (From The Named Fruit) flavours growing in many parts of the world, the SCC ensures the ability to collect the best natural flavours for addition to food products while ensuring compliance with regulations within the flavour industry.

Concentration of apple essence

The concentration of apple essence from evaporator-linked essence recovery systems can be between 40 and 150 fold, depending on the system parameters. The SCC may be used to further concentrate this material above 4,000 fold. At such high concentrations, an essence oil may be recovered. An essence oil is a separable phase consisting of aroma compounds that have exceeded their solubility limit in water.

EXAMPLE: A 150 fold apple essence was concentrated using the SCC. The concentration of select compounds in the final product is shown in Table 1. Several important points were noted as a result of this work:

  • The essence was concentrated by a factor of 28. That is, all aroma compounds were concentrated into a volume 28 times smaller than that of the feed
  • There were no volatile compounds in the SCC discharge in concentrations above 1 ppm; practically all volatile compounds were captured in the concentrated essence stream. This includes trans-2-hexenal, a particularly desirable compound in apple essence and concentrated apple essence that imparts the typical ‘green' characteristic
  • No aldehyde oxidation compounds were detected in the concentrated essence. Such compounds impart undesirable characteristics in essences and are generally formed by degradation reactions occurring as a result of extended times at high temperatures (typical of conventional essence concentration systems)

Table 1:

CompoundConcentration in Final Product (ppm)
Ethyl acetate954
Ethyl butanoate71
Butyl acetate144
Hexanal197
2-Methyl-1-propanol358
Butanol3113
2/3 Methyl butanol1601
(E)-Hex-2-enal1588
Hexanol4900
(E)-Hex-2-enol1416

Extraction of essential oils

An essential oil is a concentrated, hydrophobic liquid containing volatile organic compounds from botanical matter such as plants, herbs and spices. Common techniques for extraction of essential oils are steam stripping and distillation. Essential oils are used in many flavour and fragrance applications including perfumery, aromatherapy, and food and beverage flavouring.

Most essential oil production processes use traditional, crude and inefficient batch distillation techniques. Such systems typically expose the raw material to long periods (even hours) of high heat, resulting in the thermal degradation of the volatile oil constituents.

Alternatively, the SCC may be used for steam stripping of essential oils from a variety of raw materials.

Extraction of essential oils – mint oil

The SCC can be used to extract mint oil from fresh mint leaves. The leaf material is first milled and mixed with cold water to form a slurry. This slurry is then fed into the SCC and the oil extracted. Gas Chromatography (GC) analysis of the resulting oil highlights two notable differences when compared with analysis of a typical commercially available sample:

  • Greater yield of compounds: higher concentrations of most compounds are recorded in the samples produced by the SCC. This is particularly true of important compounds such as menthol and limonene
  • No presence of menthofuran: menthofuran is an undesirable compound known to be formed via the heat-induced degradation of compounds naturally present in mint oil.

Extraction of essential oils – Garlic Oil

Several SCC systems are in commercial operation extracting high quality garlic oil from fresh garlic. To collect garlic oil using the SCC, whole, peeled garlic is milled and mixed with cold water to form a slurry. This slurry is fed into the SCC which, over a very short time frame, extracts the oil without damage to the distinctive colour or flavour of the raw material.

Case Study

Synthite Industries leads the way with spice

World leader in spice oleoresins and associated botanicals, Synthite Industries Ltd installed the first Spinning Cone Column in India over 20 years ago to steam distil products that are thermally sensitive and require gentle processing. The high quality results produced using Flavourtech's thin film technology have enabled the company to become the key supplier to all major flavour houses in the world.

Pioneers in applying ground breaking technologies to enhance their product range and stay ahead of their competition, the benefits Synthite received from their first investment in Flavourtech's unique equipment have paved the way for further capacity increases and the use of the technology for more of their innovative products.
Subsequently, Synthite expanded production with the addition of Flavourtech's Centritherm evaporator for processing heat sensitive materials such as spices, fruit, beverages and nutraceutical ingredients, without thermal degradation. The Centritherm evaporator enables Synthite to reduce raw material consumption by preserving pigments in spice extracts and active ingredients in botanical extracts. Additionally, there are savings in their spray drying energy requirements.
As a result of further development and innovation, Synthite has recently taken advantage of Flavourtech technologies with other raw materials for products in flavour and fragrance, as well as beverage products.

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Find out more about Flavourtech's products and services:Contact us




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