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HACCP Food Safety Plan Definition of HACCP A systematic approach to construct a food safety program designed to reduce the risk of foodborne hazards by focusing on each step of the food preparation process –from receiving to service. Controlling Hazards → Safe Food
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HACCP Food Safety Plan
Definition of HACCP • A systematic approach to construct a food safety program designed to reduce the risk of foodborne hazards by focusing on each step of the food preparation process –from receiving to service.
Controlling Hazards → Safe Food • Hazards involving food preparation, i.e., improper cooking of beef, chicken, eggs, etc. • Hazards that affect all foods, such as poor personal hygiene.
Controlling Food Preparation Hazards • Identify Critical Control Points (CCPs) • Cooking, cooling, hot/cold holding, reheating • Control/prevention • Time and temperature
Controlling All Other Hazards • Develop and Implement Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs). • All activities except food preparation • Receiving, cleaning and sanitizing equipment and utensils, food storage, etc.
Step 1: Develop and Implement SOPs • Step–by-step written instructions for food service tasks that affect food safety
Sample SOPs • Cooking Potentially Hazardous Foods (PHF) • Cooling PHF • Holding Hot and Cold PHF • Date Marking, Ready-to-eat (RTE), PHF • Personal Hygiene • Reheating PHF • Receiving Deliveries • Storing and Using Poisonous or Toxic Chemicals • Using Suitable Utensils When Handling RTE Foods • Washing Fresh Fruits and Vegetables • Handwashing
SOPs for your use: • USDA is developing SOPs, the finalversions posted at: www.nfsmi.org • Iowa State University’s “Safe Food” resources www.schoolhaccp.org/
Step 2: Classify all Menu Items using the “Process Approach ” • Categorizes food preparation into three broad categories based on how many times each menu item moves through the temperature danger zone (between 41°F and 135°F).
Complex Process 3 No Cook Process 1 Same Day Process 2 The Division of Foods is Based onComplete Trips through the Temperature Danger Zone 140oF 2 1 0 3 1 41oF
Step 2Classify all menu items • The “Process Approach” categories: • Process #1 – No Cook • Process #2 – Same Day Service • Process #3 – Complex Food Preparation
Process #1 – No Cook • The menu item does not go completely through the danger zone in either direction. • Examples: fresh fruit and vegetables, salad bar items.
Process #2 – Same Day Service • The menu item takes one complete trip through the danger zone (going up during cooking) and is served. Or • Anything that is cooked and served in the same day
Process #3- Complex Food Preparation • The menu item goes through both heating and cooling, taking two or more complete trips through the danger zone. • These items are cooked, cooled and reheated.
Step 3 – Identify and document control measures and critical limits • Control measures prevent, eliminate, or reduce hazards. • Control measures include SOPs as well as the CCPs (cooking, cooling, reheating, holding) and the critical limits (times and temperatures) established in each of the three “processes”.
Example - Chicken • Process 1 • We purchase pre-prepared chicken salad and hold it cold to be served on the salad bar or on sandwiches. • Process 2 • We cook frozen or fresh chicken and serve it the same day. • Process 3 • We cook frozen or fresh chicken, cool it and use it to make chicken salad from scratch or • We cook frozen or fresh chicken, serve it the same day, have leftovers, cool it down and on another day we heat it up and serve it.
Garden Salad Grilled Ham & Cheese Leftovers Garlic Breadsticks Sub Sandwich Peach Cobbler Spaghetti Pasta Salad Hot Pocket Salsa Tortilla Chips Burrito (pre-prepared) Hamburger Sliced Tomato & Lettuce Canned Pears Chili Let’s Practice!
CCP for Process #1 – No Cook • Cold holding or limiting time in the danger zone to inhibit bacterial growth and toxin production. (Food that is held at room temperature for four hours must be discarded.)
CCPs for Process #2 – Same Day Service • Cooking to destroy harmful bacteria and other pathogens. • Hot holding or limiting time in the danger zone to prevent the outgrowth of spore-forming bacteria.
CCPs for Process #3 – Complex Food Preparation • Cooking to destroy harmful bacteria & other pathogens. • Cooling to prevent the outgrowth of spore-forming bacteria. • Hot and cold holding or limiting time in the danger zone. • Reheating for hot holding.
CCPs and their Critical Limits • Each CCP (cooking, cooling, reheating, holding) must include time and/or temperature limits. For example, when cooking chicken, the time/temperature limit is 165°F for 15 seconds.
When to Calibrate: Daily After extreme temperatures After bumping or dropping How to Calibrate: Insert stem in ice water bath (without touching bottom or sides) Adjust nut until needle indicates 32oF (freezing point) Calibrating a Bi-Metallic Stemmed Thermometer Calibration Nut-----> Dimple-----> Ice Water Bath ----->
Two-stage Method (6 Hours) (i.e., products cooked day before) 70oF within 2 hours 41oF within 4 more hours Take temperatures at 2 and 6 hour intervals to make sure that temperatures were reached. Reheat above 165oF if food has not cooled to 70oF in 2 hours or 41oF in 6 hours. Discard if more than 70oF after 2 hours or more than 41oF after 6 hours. One-stage Method (4 Hours) (i.e., leftovers) 41oF within 4 hours Take temperature after 4 hours to make sure that temperature was reached. Reheat above 165oF if food has not cooled to 41oF in 4 hours. Cooling Requirement
Documentation • You must document CCPs (heating, cooling, hot/cold holding, reheating) and Critical Limits (temperatures/times) for each menu item you sorted into the three “processes”. • HOW? Recipes and SOPs
Write the process number on each recipe Make a poster for each process and list the foods that belong in each ALL Process 1 – No Cook Tossed Salad Gelatin with Peaches RECEIVE STORE PREPARE COLD HOLD SERVE Process 2 – Same Day Where to Record Process Number • Write the process number on the menu
Recipes • Should include final and holding temperatures. • USDA Quantity Recipes for School Food Service www.nfsmi.org/Information/school_recipe_alpha.htm.
Bridging the Gaps • SOPs for menu items that do not have recipes, cooling foods and reheating leftovers.
Step 4: Monitoring • Control measures (i.e., cooking times & temperatures) must be monitored and documented in writing. • How? • When and how often? • Who is responsible for monitoring?
Monitoring Example • Cold foods must be kept at 41°F or below. • The temperature of the refrigerator must be recorded on a refrigeration temperature monitoring chart at least two times daily to make sure the temperature is 41°F or below.
Step 5: Corrective Actions • Must be carried out immediately whenever a critical limit is not met. • Examples: • Continue to heat to required temperature • Rejecting food delivery • Discarding food held too long without temperature control
Corrective Action Examples The temperature in the refrigerator is above 41°F SOP • The equipment must be checked. The thermometer used to record the temperature should be calibrated regularly and checked to see if it is working properly. • Any PHF should be temped. If unable to determine if the food has been in the danger zone for less than 4 hours, discard.
Corrective Action Example The freezer temperature is 49°F when you arrive to work on Monday morning SOP • Take temperature of food in freezer • Any food above 41°F must be discarded • Any foods below 41°F shall be transferred to a refrigerator immediately and used within 2-3 days (never re-freeze)
Step 6 – Keep Records • Food Safety Plan & Training • Monitoring Temperatures of food, equipment & food storage areas and equipment • Calibration Records • Corrective Action
Examples of Required Documentation • SOPs • Time and Temperature charts • Corrective Action records (when applicable) • Verification/Review records • Calibration records • Training logs • Receiving logs
Step 7: Review & Revise Food Safety Program Periodically • Ongoing monitoring • Periodic – at least yearly – to reflect facility or equipment changes (i.e., new equipment and menu items)
Factors Contributing to Your Success • Facility • Equipment • Managers • Employees
All Employees should have: • Initial food safety training • On-going food safety training • Record of training kept by district • Training standards monitored daily by manager • Review of SOP guidelines at least yearly
HACCP Program Requirements • A written plan at each site that includes: • Documenting menu items in the appropriate “process” category. • Documenting Critical Control Points of food production. • Monitoring • Establishing and documenting corrective action. • Recordkeeping • Reviewing and revising the overall food safety program periodically.