350 likes | 538 Views
Food Act, Food Hygiene and Food Control Plans. Brett Playle, Senior environmental health officer. Food Act 2014. Power to impose movement controls; to direct the recall of food; or to require information already in place. All other parts of Act come into force 1 March 2016. What does it do?.
E N D
Food Act, Food Hygiene and Food Control Plans Brett Playle, Senior environmental health officer
Food Act 2014 Power to impose movement controls; to direct the recall of food; or to require information already in place. All other parts of Act come into force 1 March 2016
What does it do? Restates and reforms the law relating to how persons trade in food Achieving the safety and suitabilityof foodfor sale Maintaining confidence in NZ’s food safety regime
How does it work? • Provides for risk-based measures • Provides certainty for food businesses • Requires persons who trade in food to take responsibility for safety and suitability
Benefits? • Flexible, risk-based • Empowers businesses to manage food safety; recognises differences • Enables businesses to put in place safe systems at lower cost ; provides tools to manage food safety • Covers all food for sale or export; exemptions • Consistent national system • Focus on producing safe food ≠ prescriptive rules
So? • New regulations/notices in consultation with TAs and food industry- late 2014, early 2015. • Year 1- Food Service Sector, On-licence (bars, cafes, restaurants) • Year 2- Food Service Sector (prepare/deliver pizza/takeaway meals; commercial catering; hospitals, hospices, rest homes; catering services:- defence, prison, educational facilities) • Year 2- Food Retail Sector (bakeries; dairies*; fishmongers; butchers; supermarkets*)
Current legislation • Food Hygiene Regulations 1974 • Food Act 1981 • Health Act 1956 • The Health (Registration of Premises) Regulations 1966 • The Health (Infectious and Notifiable Diseases) Regulations 1966
Sale of Food to the Public • Certificate of Registration under FH Regs 1974 • Or an active exemption from FH Regs 1974 by fully implementing a Food Safety Programme. • A Food Control Plan is a template-FSP.
Regulations • Prescriptive • ‘must’, ‘shall’ • Old? (1974!) • Emphasis on physical requirements.
Food Control Plan • HACCP/Codex Alimentarius principles • A quality management system to produce safe food. • Identifying, controlling, managing, eliminating, minimizing hazards.
OTP-FCP • Training and Supervision • Hand hygiene • Personal hygiene • Health and sickness • Readily perishable food • Cleaning and sanitising • Food allergens
Approved suppliers • Purchasing and Receiving • Checking temperatures • Calibration, every 12 weeks, 0 and 100 ° C ± 1.
Storage • Pest-proof containers, FIFO • Chilled/frozen food storage • Store cooked and RTE food separately from raw, uncooked food. • Covered and date-marked • R-P-F made on site date marked for when it should be used by • ≤ 5 ° C • Frozen solid
Preparation • Prepare raw food separate from cooked/RTE food (or different times, cleaning & sanitising in between) • Different cutting boards. • Minimise time in danger zone (5 – 60 ° C) • Disposable piping bags or reusable (cleaned and sanitised).
Defrosting frozen food • In fridge/chiller (best way) • Microwave (use immediately) • Air-tight container + cold running water • Bench ≤ 4 hours
Cooking Poultry • > 75 ° C, instantaneous, or • = 75 ° C, 15 sec or • 70 ° C, 2 min or • 65 ° C, 10 min. • Thickest part of the meat. • Standard time/temp method (once per week), or each time, every time, or one in a batch.
Hot holding • Foodmust be reheated first! • ≥ 60 ° C • Use probe thermometer to check 2 hour hot holding. • Don’t top up- replace! • 21 - 60 ° C > 2 hours, throw away.
Cooling hot prepared food • R-P-F , cooled 60 to 21 ° C within 2 hours, and 21 to below 5 ° C in another 2 hours. How? • Blast chiller • Shallow tray • Smaller portions • Rack/air circulation • Colder area • Vac-pack food, place in iced water • Food in chiller once 21 ° C.
Reheating prepared food • Oven, microwave, pot, pan, wok. • Reheat poultry ≥ 75 ° C. • Stir, mix foods. • Watch use of plastics in microwave ovens.
Display and self service • Chilled RTE-RPF is held ≤ 5 ° C or displayed unrefrigerated ≤ 4 hours. • Time on display > 5 ° C indicated by time stickers on wrapping/next to food or, coloured stickers. • Sneeze guards, covers. • Supervision • Left-over self service food is not re-used.
Special foods • Sushi pH of rice ≤ 4.8 (test monthly) Ingredients— sealed, airtight packaging or Soak prepared vegetables in food-safe sanitiser for 10 min, rinse. • Cooled 60 → 21 ° C in 2 hours → ≤ 15 ° C in next 4 hours. • Nigiri, ≤ 15 ° C, ≤ 8 hours • Nori, ≤ 15 ° C, ≤ 12 hours
Special foods (continued) • Chinese style roast duck Dipped in boiling water + vinegar + spices Hung to dry ≤ 6 hours Start & half way through drying process (temp probe ≤ 25 ° C) Roasted Hanging hook, skin intact Displayed in well ventilated area Not touching On display ≤ 22 hours
Special foods (continued) • Doner Kebab Length of formed block of meat ≤ length of burners. Amount of meat ≈ 1 day Meat collected when shaved (don’t let fall into drip tray!) Start cooking → keep cooking! Minced meat spits (cook from frozen) Shaved meats → 2nd cook process (hot plate)
Sous vide • Vac-pack raw food → water bath or combi steamer • Minimum internal temp (60°C for 45 min) • Closed cell foam tape • Validation records:- time/temperature/weight of product/thickness • Calibration:- temperature probe/water bath • Chill as quickly as possible. • Shelf life < 10 days. • Risks:- L. monocytogenes, C. botulinum
Hand hygiene • Soap, nailbrush, warm running water (20 sec) • Hand-drying:- single-use paper towels; single-use (cloth) roller towel; air blower. • Gloves:- not a substitute; change between tasks; wash hands after removal and before putting on.
Cleaning and sanitising • Preclean,hot water + detergent, rinse, sanitise with food-safe sanitiser, final rinse, air dry or single use drying cloth. • Dishwashers:- items too hot to handle • Cleaning cloths:- single use or washed, sanitised, dried. • Outside tables:- designated cleaning cloths.
Cleaning schedule • What, how (chemicals, dilutions, equipment), when, who. • Work surfaces, chopping boards, utensils, fridges, mixers, slicers, processors, sinks, soap dispensers, reusable cloths, work clothes, ice machines. • Touch points:- rubbish bins, broom & mop handles, door handles, taps, switches, can openers, telephones.
Maintenance schedule. • Fridges/freezers • Ovens • Dishwashers • Ice machines • Coffee machines • Air extraction equipment • Hot/cold holding equipment • Slicers/mixers • Knives • Flyscreens, chopping blocks.
Pest Control • Deter (rubbish covered/removed; cleaning!) • Keep out (maintenance; incoming goods) • Monitor (traps; detectors; bait stations) • Control → eliminate. • Best done by professionals
Water Supply • Surface water, groundwater supply, or roof water should have a treatment system. filtration (> 1 NTU) chlorination UV disinfection. • Monitor FAC (weekly, 0.2mg/L), E. coli testing (3 monthly) • Maintenance schedule (pumps, filters, UV lamps, back-flow prevention) • Cleaning schedule (tanks, UV light , filters)
What does an EHO look for? • Are you managing the risks? -temperature records (chilled RPF in refrigerators; cooked poultry; sous vide; cooling; reheating; hot holding) • Cleaning schedule (written v reality) • Staff training • High Risk menu items? • Pest control. • Approved supplier records. • Discussion/dialogue • PAS form
Off the Peg-Food Control Plan • Does not cover:- vulnerable people (hospices, hospitals, aged-care, day-care centres) chilled/frozen meals jams, pickles, cakes for sale elsewhere wholesale manufacturers The plan doesn’t work unless you do!
http://www.foodsafety.govt.nz/elibrary/industry/food-control-food-fcp-plans/Food_Control_Plan_Version.pdfhttp://www.foodsafety.govt.nz/elibrary/industry/food-control-food-fcp-plans/Food_Control_Plan_Version.pdf • http://www.legislation.govt.nz/regulation/public/1974/0169/latest/DLM42658.html?src=qs • www.southoxon.gov.uk/node/9550 (sous vide cooking) HappyCooking!