Mayonnaise factory: Batch or continuous—what fits your line?
You get calm in your mayonnaise process mainly when variation doesn’t stay “mysterious,” but can be traced back to something concrete: dosing, shear, temperature, waiting time, or product retention. A good line helps you link gloss, “body” on the spoon, and the formation of a thin oil layer to what’s happening in the process. So look at the whole chain: dosing, emulsifying, temperature control, buffering, filling, and your CIP routine. Then your choice isn’t just about liters per hour, but about what you need to make every run come out the same.
If you look at an example of a mayonnaise processing plant, you’ll usually see one common thread: the end result depends less on one machine and more on how your process is set up as a whole. So start with stability and cleanability, and only then zoom in on capacity.
Start where your variation is created (not at your target output)
You get the biggest gains when your line itself shows you where the product starts to “drift.” That way you don’t have to correct late in the game—you can spot it early and adjust at the source. That builds confidence when you scale up later.
A line designed for that makes three things clear quickly:
- Where variation enters: you can see whether differences come earlier from raw material condition, incoming temperature, or shear (for example due to settings or a different product route).
- What your process is actually controlling: setpoints (temperature, dosing, recirculation/hold time) and tolerances are unambiguous, so you’re not dependent on interpretation.
- How corrections happen: fixed limits and fixed responses (for example “at X, go to Y”), so adjustments rely less on gut feel.
When scaling up, your recipe stays the same, but residence time, heat input, and the order of addition can shift. If you account for that in your process design, you keep the spread under control more easily.
Batch: Great for lots of changeovers, and with the right checks nicely consistent
Batch is useful if you run many SKUs, change over often, or are still tweaking the formulation. You have natural moments to steer, and your planning is often more flexible.
The trick with batch is: make the moments between steps predictable. Waiting times affect how your emulsion builds. If you standardize your timing (or steer it deliberately), the first and last output from the same batch will feel more alike, and you’ll need fewer corrections to hit the same viscosity.
Batch-to-batch consistency gets easier if your process locks in:
- Dosing per run: A fixed order and timing of additions, so every run starts from the same baseline.
- Mixing intensity: Settings and duration are fixed, so it doesn’t vary by operator.
- Raw material response: Fixed correction rules make adjustments faster and more consistent.
CIP can also be tightly planned in batch if product retention stays limited and “tricky spots” are recognizable. Aim your cleaning at typical risk points like dead legs, long pipe runs, or awkward transitions, and link cleaning steps to what you actually want to remove there (instead of automatically rinsing longer).
(Semi-)continuous can be interesting if you mainly see recurring variation that comes back at the same moments, and you want to be less dependent on manual corrections.
Continuous: A steadier rhythm, and with good measurements even calmer operation
Continuous or semi-continuous often gives a more even process: fewer swings in viscosity and a steadier feed to filling. You notice that especially if you currently have to “pull it back into line” a lot while running.
Continuous relies heavily on measurement and control strategy. Because you have fewer pause moments, you want to spot deviations early and damp them quickly. In-line measurements (for example flow and temperature) help you check immediately whether you’re still at your intended process point. That keeps the cause close to where it’s created, instead of only showing up at filling or in final inspection.
Changeovers and allergen control run most smoothly when the line supports a fixed, repeatable way of working. Then you can check cleaning and release criteria the same way every time: when is the line “clean enough” to switch over?
Also watch heat input: high shear can add extra heat. A continuous design that’s built for that helps you keep temperature stable during the run, instead of having to correct it afterward.
Batch often fits better if you change over a lot, run small batches, or deliberately want room to tweak the formulation step by step.
A quick decision guide
If you have many SKUs and lots of changeovers in packaging and planning, batch often fits better. If you mainly run a few bestsellers and want predictability and a stable production rhythm, (semi-)continuous is often more logical. Look at your line as one system: where is your real constraint—dosing, temperature, waiting time, or cleaning—and which choice makes that part simpler?

