All Posts Tagged: Food Equipment

British Sandwich Association adopts Food Hygiene Rating Scheme

In a positive move forward, the British Sandwich Association, the trade association which runs a food safety certification scheme for sandwich and sandwich mix manufacturers, has adopted a minimum 3 out of 5 score as a mandatory requirement for its retail members. The scheme awards score of 0 to 5 where 5 is excellent and 0 indicates urgent attention to food safety controls and /or site standards. Read about it here

So how do sandwich manufacturers, food factories, restaurants, pubs, hotels and takeaways achieve a 5 score? By having commitment to food safety in these primary areas:

  • A HACCP based Food Safety management system – which is mandatory for this and under EC Food Hygiene Regulations
  • Good site standards with appropriate hygienic work-flow, lay-out, hygienic surfaces and hygienic equipment
  • Good Pest Control to minimise risk to food from flies, rodents and cockroaches
  • Good Housekeeping and Hygiene to ensure that the unit is kept nice and clean and, where needed, sanitised
  • Good Personal Hygiene to ensure that food handlers understand and appreciate the risks they can pose to food and take simple measures to avoid risk, such as hand-washing and clean protective clothing, including head covering (how many takeaways and restaurants do you visit where you see food handlers wearing jewellery and loose long hair – I bet it’s quite a few!)
  • Illness reporting procedures to prevent staff suffering from infectious food-borne conditions contaminating food
  • Good waste control – to prevent build up of waste in the food room
  • Good ventilation – to reduce condensation building up

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And so on……it’s all of course laid out in the Food Hygiene Regulations

And can easily be monitored and improved through the process of internal checks and external hygiene audits.

On another, but related note, it has been suggested to me in the past that, in exercising these controls, we are living in a falsely sterilised environment and have opened ourselves up to immunological weakness. Well consider two things: Have you ever had full blown Salmonella food poisoning from a food establishment? If so you probably would never want it again and you possibly lost valuable work days as a result – all because someone else didn’t care or take the time enough to think of you and minimise the risk! And just by ensuring good food safety we aren’t living in a sterile world. If you go out, as you probably do, every day, into a number of different situations, and if you eat “natural” food (i.e. non processed), such as fruit and salad, then you are presenting a challenge to your system that is just fine.

 

US Canteloupe Listeria outbreak linked to packaging machinery

This recent and very serious Listeria outbreak in the US has been reported by Food Quality News as the worst in modern history with a death toll of 29.

Listeria can, once it takes hold within the food area, be very difficult indeed to eliminate. The organism is associated with areas of wet and standing water, such as floors and drains. Using very high pressure hoses can exacerbate the problem causing micro-aerosols which spread far and wide around the food room, contaminating other surfaces and food equipment.

A higher risk of Listeria within raw materials and ingredients needs to be highlighted within the assessment of hazard significance as part of the HACCP Plan. Then the risk to the food stream and factory can be appreciated and effective controls proposed and implemented. Those controls will centre around the key pre-requisites of selection and maintenance of materials used in construction of the food room, design and hygiene of equipment, and effective, validated cleaning and disinfection procedures using clean and well designed cleaning equipment and chemicals.

Milan HOST exhibition

The HOST exhibition last week was simply huge! 18 halls of equipment for catering and hospitality and several hundred exhibitors. It was great to see such activity and such a positive outlook in the face of a gloomy economy.

So many of the equipment manufacturers take hygienic design on board now. This is heartening. On many stands there was evidence of a high degree of certification, to ISO 9001, CE, health & safety and food safety standards. Those who excel in hygienic design and control can take advantage of a specific certification mark awarded for “fitness for purpose” in a food environment. This is good news for all who are concerned about food safety, providing the assurance of mitigated risk for those buying equipment and providing a unique marketing platform for those equipment providers who achieve certification.

Introduction To New Scheme

A scheme now exists in Europe for providers of services and equipment into the food industry to be measured against a quality standard. Not entirely unlike the BRC Standard for food producers this will provide an assurance to the food industry that their equipment and service suppliers have been audited and checked with contribution to food safety and quality in mind. The service is provided by HACCP Europe, falling under the parent banner of HACCP International. The reference to HACCP is a clear indication of the purpose of this standard and ties up this important food safety management tool, implemented by the food industry already, with these service and equipment providers.