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ICAR JRF Food Science Technology Syllabus 2026 — Code 18 Unit-wise Topics

Complete ICAR JRF Food Science Technology syllabus 2026 — Code 18 unit-wise topics for food chemistry, food process engineering, food processing technology, food microbiology, safety, and preservation.

ICAR JRF Food Science Technology Syllabus 2026 — Code 18

Major Subject Group: Food Science Technology
Sub-Subjects: 18.1 Food Processing Technology · 18.2 Food Process Engineering · 18.3 Food Safety & Quality

This is the complete syllabus page for ICAR JRF Food Science Technology (Code 18). The paper mixes food chemistry, unit operations, food processing lines, microbiology, preservation, packaging, safety, and engineering basics, so rank usually depends on how well you connect theory with process applications.


Exam Snapshot

Parameter Details
Subject Code 18 — Food Science Technology
Subject Group Major Subject Group: Food Science Technology
Total Questions 120 MCQs
Duration 2 Hours
Marking Scheme +4 per correct answer
Negative Marking −1/3 per wrong answer
Question Type Multiple Choice (Single correct)
Medium English

Latest Official Notification Details

Parameter 2026-27 Official Detail
Notice Date 08 May 2026
Application Window 08 May 2026 to 07 June 2026 (up to 5:00 PM)
Fee Payment Deadline 07 June 2026 (up to 11:50 PM)
Correction Window 09 June to 10 June 2026
Exam Date 04 July 2026 (Saturday)
Mode Computer Based Test (CBT)
Pattern Objective type MCQs
Medium English only
Duration 02 hours (120 minutes)
Test Cities Around 122 cities across India
Source NTA 2026 Public Notice PDF · ICAR Syllabus PDF

What Is Officially Fixed For Code 18

  • Code 18 is the official major subject group for Food Science Technology in AICE JRF/SRF (Ph.D.).
  • The paper is conducted in English only, in CBT mode, for 120 minutes.
  • The public syllabus groups the paper into food chemistry, food process engineering, food processing technology, and food safety/microbiology/preservation.
  • NTA publishes the schedule, exam mode, and pattern, but it does not publish official chapter-wise weightage for Food Science Technology.
  • The priority guidance below is therefore revision strategy, not an official NTA marks chart.

Code 18 Structure at a Glance

ICAR JRF Food Science Technology Code 18 map showing food chemistry engineering operations processing technology and food safety quality
Code 18 is not a single-theory paper; it is a linked system of chemistry, engineering, processing, and food safety.

Unit-I: Food Chemistry

  • General chemistry of food constituents
  • Physical properties of foods
  • Properties of colloidal systems, gels, and emulsions
  • Minerals in foods
  • Physicochemical changes in foods during processing and storage
  • Functions of food nutrients
  • Dietary allowances and nutritional requirements
  • Metabolism of carbohydrates, lipids, and protein
  • Biological value and PER
  • Food additives, contaminants, and anti-nutritional factors
  • Food flavours and puff-flavours
  • National and international food standards
  • Modern analytical techniques in food analysis

Unit-II: Food Process Engineering

  • Engineering properties of food materials
  • System analysis
  • Mass and energy balance
  • Principles, operations, and equipment for:
    • food materials flow and handling
    • cleaning
    • de-husking
    • sorting and grading
    • peeling
    • size reduction
    • mixing and forming
    • bakery foods manufacture
    • extrusion
    • separation
    • filtration and membrane processes
    • expression
    • baking, roasting, frying
    • extraction and leaching
    • crystallization and distillation
    • blanching, pasteurization, sterilization
    • evaporation, drying, freezing
    • packing and heat exchange
  • Dairy-specific operations
  • Process equipment design
  • Heat and mass transfer
  • Equipment for steam generation, compressed air, refrigeration, air conditioning, water and wastewater treatment
  • Biochemical engineering and thermobacteriology
  • Automation, online data acquisition, and process control
  • Food plant layout and design
  • Energy audit
Food science technology revision visual showing sorting blanching drying freezing packaging microbial control and preservation pathways
Revise Code 18 through process transitions: raw material handling, unit operations, preservation, packaging, and microbial control.

Unit-III: Food Processing Technology

  • Preparation and manufacturing technology of cereals and bakery products
  • Beef, pork, poultry, fish and seafoods, and egg products
  • Sausages and table-ready meats
  • Dairy products
  • Fresh fruits and fresh vegetables
  • Processed fruits and processed vegetables
  • Post-harvest handling and storage of fruits and vegetables
  • Sugars, sweets, fats, and oils
  • Fermented foods
  • Alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages
  • Indigenous foods
  • Fast, ready-made, and fashion foods
  • Dehydration and concentration methods
  • Irradiation
  • Microwave and solar processing of foods
  • Food by-products and downstream processing
  • Flavouring and pigment technology
  • Judging of food products

Unit-IV: Food Safety, Microbiology, and Preservation

  • Role of intrinsic and extrinsic properties of food in relation to microbial growth
  • Microbiology of fruits, fruit products, vegetables, soft drinks, bakery products, milk and milk products, fish, egg, and marine products
  • Spoilage of foods
  • Food pathogens and their toxins in relation to human health
  • Food preservation by sugar, salt, chemicals, heat, cold, irradiation, dehydration, and packaging
  • Microbiology of fermented foods and beverages
  • Factors affecting their quality
  • Methods for microbiological examination of foods
  • Food hygiene and safety regulations
  • Water quality and waste disposal in food industry

Exam-Focused High-Yield Areas

Area Why it matters in Code 18 prep
Food constituents, gels, emulsions, and physicochemical changes Common direct-theory MCQ area in food chemistry
Mass-energy balance and unit operations Core engineering block that separates shallow preparation from serious preparation
Sorting, grading, drying, freezing, extraction, membrane processing High-return operations because they can be tested as principle, equipment, or application
Cereals, bakery, dairy, fruits, vegetables, meat processing Product-wise processing questions often come from these standard manufacturing blocks
Food preservation methods One of the most predictable and repeatedly asked areas
Food pathogens, spoilage, and toxins Strong scoring area because the questions are often objective and direct
Packaging, plant layout, utilities, and process control Technical but compact topics that add easy marks once revised properly
Food standards and safety regulations Important finishing layer for quality-oriented questions

Quick Reference: What To Revise First

Area What to revise first
Food Chemistry Constituents, colloids, gels, emulsions, additives, anti-nutritional factors, food standards
Process Engineering Mass-energy balance, heat and mass transfer, drying, freezing, membrane processes, plant layout
Processing Technology Cereals and bakery, dairy products, fruits and vegetables, dehydration, concentration, irradiation
Safety & Microbiology Intrinsic and extrinsic factors, spoilage, pathogens, toxins, preservation, hygiene
Fast Final Revision Packaging, utilities, refrigeration, wastewater treatment, automation, energy audit

Best Books for ICAR JRF Food Science Technology

This list keeps the same book-to-syllabus mapping format used across the JRF subject pages.

Book Best use in the syllabus
Food Science — B. Srilakshmi Best base coverage for Code 18
Food Processing and Preservation — G. Subbulakshmi & Shobha A. Udayakumar Best for food processing and preservation
Introduction to Food Engineering — R. Paul Singh & Dennis R. Heldman Best for food process engineering and numericals
Food Processing Technology: Principles and Practice — P. J. Fellows Best for unit operations and process-flow clarity
Engineering Properties of Foods — M. A. Rao, Syed S. H. Rizvi & Ashim K. Datta Best for engineering properties and transfer processes
Minimal rank-oriented plan Food Science — B. Srilakshmi, Introduction to Food Engineering — Singh & Heldman, and Food Processing Technology — P. J. Fellows + PYQs

How To Prepare The General Agriculture Layer Efficiently With AgriDots

For plant- and agriculture-heavy JRF groups, the common agriculture base is explicit in the official syllabus itself. That is clear in groups such as Agronomy, Soil Science, Horticulture, Entomology, Plant Science, Plant Biotechnology, Social Sciences, and Water Science & Technology. In the animal, dairy, fisheries, food, engineering, forestry, community-science, and statistics groups, the same layer still improves scores because objective papers reward candidates who can quickly eliminate options using basic knowledge of crops, soils, schemes, extension, economics, statistics, and current agriculture.

So the practical rule is simple: do not prepare your subject in isolation. Keep one common-agriculture revision layer active throughout your JRF preparation.

Shared Books For The Common Agriculture Layer

Book Best use in common JRF preparation
Fundamentals of Agriculture, Vol. 1 & 2 — Arun Katyayan Best base book for crop production, soils, nutrient deficiency, plant biology, genetics, pests, diseases, and agriculture basics
A Competitive Book of Agriculture — Nem Raj Sunda Best for objective revision once the basic theory is already clear
Objective Agriculture for JRF Exam — S. R. Kantwa Useful for MCQ drilling, recall speed, and mixed-agriculture practice
General Agriculture for ICAR Examinations — Muniraj Singh Rathore Good backup book for one-line revision and broad competitive coverage

Why AgriDots Is More Efficient Than Reading Books Alone

Use AgriDots for Why it is faster than books alone
Shared Agriculture Course It compresses the overlapping JRF base into linked notes across agronomy, soil science, horticulture, genetics, pathology, entomology, economics, extension, animal husbandry, fisheries, ecology, and agricultural statistics instead of forcing you to extract overlap manually from multiple standard books
Topic-Wise Agriculture Practice Tests You can revise chapter by chapter immediately after reading instead of waiting until one full book is complete
Agriculture Test Series Mixed-subject Revision Warrior quizzes train recall across subjects, which is closer to how objective papers actually feel
Agriculture Current Affairs Hub Books do not stay current on MSP, schemes, production reports, fertilizer policy, dairy/fisheries updates, or digital-agriculture changes

Efficient JRF Workflow With AgriDots

  1. Read one main subject book for your core discipline and keep the rest of the books as support, not as parallel first reads.
  2. Use /courses/agriculture to finish the overlapping general-agriculture layer faster than building notes from multiple books.
  3. After each topic, solve topic-wise quizzes so weak areas become visible immediately.
  4. Use Revision Warrior mixed tests to train switching between crop, soil, genetics, economics, extension, and current-affairs questions.
  5. Use agriculture-current-affairs every week so your static preparation stays updated with schemes, policy, production, and report-based questions.

Why this works better than books alone: standard books build depth, but they are slow, repetitive across subjects, and weak on current agriculture. AgriDots is better for speed, revision order, topic linking, and exam-style recall, while books remain your depth source.


Preparation Strategy

  1. Start with food chemistry and preservation basics so later processing questions make sense.
  2. Then learn unit operations as a sequence, not as disconnected headings.
  3. Keep mass-energy balance, heat transfer, drying, freezing, and membrane processes in a separate revision notebook if engineering is your weak area.
  4. After that, revise product-wise technology: cereals, bakery, dairy, fruits, vegetables, meat, and beverages.
  5. End with food safety, spoilage organisms, pathogens, and standards, because these questions are usually direct and fast to score.

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