There are hawthorn trees and nfc juice. 1. Under the hawthorn tree is the trademark of hawthorn pulp juice drink applied by Tianjin Guanfang Cola Beverage Co., Ltd. in 2015. 2. NFC is the abbreviation of Not From Concentrate in English. It is called "non-concentrated reduced juice" in Chinese. It is made by washing the fresh original fruit and squeezing out the juice. After instant sterilization, it is directly filled (without concentration and recovery), which completely retains the juice. The original fresh flavor of the fruit. NFC juice filling is divided into cold filling and hot filling. Cold filling is more conducive to preserving the nutrients and taste of the original juice, while hot filling is more conducive to the preservation and timeliness of the juice. The vast majority of pure fresh fruit juices on the market today are actually just ordinary concentrated fruit juices, which are concentrated fruit juices mixed with water, sugar, preservatives, etc. to reduce them to drinkable fruit juices. Due to the complex processing of concentration and reduction, its freshness and taste cannot be compared with NFC products. Introduction to Under the Hawthorn Tree
Under the Hawthorn Tree is a registered trademark applied by Tianjin Guanfang Cola Beverage Co., Ltd. in 2015.
In order to meet market demand, Guanfang established a production base under the hawthorn tree and is committed to creating green, additive-free healthy products. Introduction to nfc juice NFC? is the abbreviation of "Not From Concentrate" in English. The Chinese meaning is "non-concentrated reduced juice", that is, non-concentrated reduced 100% juice. ?NFC juice? is made from fruits that are pasteurized directly after being squeezed and processed in a low-temperature environment. Since this freshly squeezed juice is heated for a relatively short time during processing, it loses less nutrients and better maintains the original flavor of the fresh fruit. The disadvantage of this kind of juice is that it is suitable for low-temperature storage and has a relatively short shelf life; in addition, because it is a real pure juice and is not easy to store, the cost is also high. Most of the fruit juice drinks commonly seen on the market are reconstituted from concentrated juice, resulting in serious nutrient loss. Some businesses are also playing around with it, claiming that the juice content is 100%. However, upon closer inspection, this statement is inappropriate. . The advantage of reduced juice is that it is easy to store, relatively cheap, and generally accepted by the public.
NFC is the abbreviation of Not From Concentrate in English. It is called "non-concentrated reduced juice" in Chinese. It is made by washing the fresh raw fruit and squeezing out the juice. After instant sterilization, it can be directly canned (without concentration and recovery). ), completely retaining the original fresh flavor of the fruit.
NFC juice filling is divided into cold filling and hot filling. Cold filling is more conducive to preserving the nutrients and taste of the original juice, while hot filling is more conducive to the preservation and timeliness of the juice.
The vast majority of pure fresh fruit juices on the market today are actually ordinary concentrated fruit juices, which are concentrated fruit juices mixed with water, sugar, preservatives, etc. to reduce them to drinkable fruit juices. Due to the complex processing of concentration and reduction, its freshness and taste cannot be compared with NFC products.