Microbial growth is dependent upon many environmental conditions such as: ingredients, nutrients, water activity, pH, presence of preservatives (e.g., curing salts), competitive microbiological flora, gas atmosphere, redox potential, storage tempertature and time. Control of these condition can therefore be used to limit microbial growth.
For refrigerated foods, an important saftety hurdle to control microbial growth is refrigeration. A wide variety of refrigerated foods also make use of additional factors to control microbial growth called hurdles.
To extend the shelf life of refrigerated packaged foods, generally more than one barrier is used to control microbial growth, to inhibit spoilage and to prevent foodborne disease. Suitable combinations of hurdles can be devised so that the organisms of concern can no longer grow/survive in the product. The presence of a number of hurdles inhibiting or eliminating microorganisms may be synergistic. Therefore it may require less of each barrier to control growth than would be expected from considering the effect of each individual barrier.
When using the barrier concept for product development, the effect of the barrier(s) on product shelf life and safety should be considered thoroughly. For example, a certain type of modified atmosphere might inhibit the growth of spoilage organisms in refrigerated food. The growth of these microorganisms, which could inhibit toxin production or act as an indicator of poor storage conditions, is limited. Therefore the extension of the product's shelf life may lead to the growth of pathogenic microorganisms without any signs of spoilage.
Examples of hurdles, other than refrigeration, are:
a) Water activity
Microorganisms vary in their ability to grow at reduced levels of aw and will be inhibited as the available water is reduced. A reduction of water activity to 0.94 is, to varying degrees, usually adequate to suppress the growth of most pathogenic bacteria, particularly at low temperatures. Yeast and mold are the only organisms that can grow below a water activity below 0.85. Note that vegetative cells may show increased heat resistance at lower water activities.
(b) pH
It is well known that decreasing pH is an effective way of controlling the growth of microorganisms. For example, pasteurized products with pH less than 4.5 are bacteriologically stable, because most vegetative microorganisms are inactivated by a mild heat treatment and surviving bacilli and clostridia are inhibited by the low pH. However, for meat and vegetable products, a small reduction of pH from their normal range (6.0–6.5) to about 5.0–5.2 will have a beneficial effect in the context of combined hurdles.
(c) Inoculation with competitive microbiological flora
It is recognized that many foodborne pathogens are poor competitors. Therefore, inoculation with harmless/non pathogenic competitive microbiological flora such as lactic acid bacteria may reduce the pH and may inhibit growth of pathogens. The effect of such inoculation should be proven to be effective against the target organism(s).
For instance, if a refrigerated food is to be packed in a reduced oxygen atmosphere and has a shelf life longer than 10 days, one or more of the following hurdles should also be considered as a way to control psychrotrophic strains of Clostridium botulinum (non proteolytic) in combination with a heat process, if this heat process is not equivalent to 90°C for 10 minutes:
adjust water activity (aw) to below 0.97;
increase acidity by lowering pH below 5.0;
add sodium chloride to 3% in brine;
use combinations of water activity, pH, modified atmosphere, storage temperature etc. that demonstrably will inhibit the growth of psychrotrophic strains of Clostridium botulinum within the shelf life and expected storage conditions.
Predictive models may be used to estimate both the effectiveness of preservation conditions and the effects of modifying product composition and varying handling/storage conditions on safety.
Whenever there is doubt that the conditions applied might not effectively control the microorganisms of concern (including estimation resulting from predictive modelling), challenge studies should be conducted. Such studies, in which specific organisms are inoculated into products prior to storage, should use the worst case conditions of expected storage and distribution. It is advisable that scientific advice is sought.
Useful References
“Retail Guidelines: Refrigerated Foods in Reduced Oxygen Packages'”, Us Association of Food & Drug Officials.
“Interaction of Factors to Control Microbial Spoilage of Refrigerated Foods”', VN Scott, J. Food Prot., 1989, 52(6), 431–5.
“Guidelines for the Development, Production, Distribution and Handling of Refrigerated Foods” 1989, US National Food Processors Association.
“Mechanism of Action of Food Preservation Procedures”, 1989, GW Gould (Editor) Elsevier Applied Science London.
“Food Preservatives and the Microbiological Consequences of their Reduction or Omission”. TA Roberts, PJ McClure, Proc. Nutr. Soc., 1990, 49(1), 1–12.
“Guidelines for Microbiological Challenge Testing” 1987. CFDRA. Technical Manual No. 20.
This appendix includes three examples of refrigerated packaged foods. Each of these examples present different:
process technologies;
barrier(s) used;
specific shelf lives;
risks.
These examples will illustrate the use of the HACCP approach. Under no circumstances should they be used as such for the implementation of a HACCP program in a specific facility.
1) BEEF BOURGUIGNON
1.1 Product Definition
Incoming materials as received:
frozen beef
bacon
sliced raw carrot
sliced frozen mushrooms
dried broth
sterilized spices
concentrated red wine
trays and plastic film
Important processing characteristics:
preparation of ingredients before use
packaged hermetically
heat treatment after packaging
1.2 Intended use
shelf life: 42 days
ready-to-eat, reheating prior to consumption
to be kept under refrigeration at 4°C or less
1.3 Process flow diagram
| Receiving |
| ↓ |
| Storage |
| ↓ |
| Thawing of Meat |
| ↓ |
| Unpacking of Ingredients |
| ↓ |
| Weighing |
| ↓ |
| Preparation of Ingredients |
| ↓ |
| Storage |
| ↓ |
| Assembling |
| ↓ |
| Hermetic Sealing |
| ↓ |
| Heat treatment |
| ↓ |
| Cooling |
| ↓ |
| Labelling |
| ↓ |
| Storage |
| ↓ |
| Shipping |
1.4 Hazard Identification
For this beef bourguignon, the foodborne pathogen of concern is Clostridium botulinum. Other pathogens of concern (e.g. Listeria, Salmonella) can be controlled by the heat treatment.
1.5 Identification of Preventative Measures
Control of Clostridium botulinum can be accomplished by:
heat treatment (minimum of 90°C for 10 min, internal temperature, or equivalent).
other pathogens of concern (e.g. Salmonella) will be controlled by the heat treatment designed for Clostridium botulinum. A more severe heat treatment may be required to control spoilage bacteria. This should be verified in shelf life studies.
cooling after heat treatment.
refrigerated storage.
specification for a maximum shelf life.
Hermetic sealing is required to prevent recontamination by other foodborne pathogens (e.g. Listeria) after heat treatment.
1.6 Examples of CCPs
It is not possible to present an exhaustive list of all CCPs required to control all hazards. In reality, one would need to be in specific food premise situation. However, an illustration of a number of CCPs follows. It [should be] is remembered that HACCP is product/process and plant specific.
TABLE 1 - BEEF BOURGUIGNON - EXAMPLES OF CCPs
| Step | Hazard | Preventive Measyres (CCP) | Critical Limit | Monitoring | Corrective Action | Verification | Records |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heat treatment | Inadequate reduction of Clostridium botulinum | Scheduled process and adherence to proper procedures | 90°C for 10 mins. Or equivalent No deviation from procedures | Recording of time/temperature Cook check indicator. Foreman to check procedures | Lot retention for evaluation and proper disposition. | QC to check log book. | Time/Temperature Charts Log book. |
| Cooling | Growth of Sporeformers (e.g. C. Botulinum, B. Cereus) | Fast cooling and adherence to proper procedures | Cooling from 60°C to 10°C in less than 2 hours. From 10°C to 4°C in less than 6 hours. No deviation from procedures | Recording of Time/Temperature. Foreman to check procedures. | Lot retention for evaluation and proper disposition. | QC to check log book. | Cooling charts Log book. |
2 FRESH STUFFED PASTA
2.1 Product Definition
Incoming materials as received:
cooked meat stuffing (cooked in original package)
pasteurized liquid eggs (refrigerated , in bulk)
hard wheat semolina
bread crumbs
trays and plastic film
Important processing characteristics:
preparation of ingredients before assembling
heat treatment before packaging
cooling before packaging
modified atmosphere packaging
2.2 Intended use
shelf life: 30 days
must be cooked by end-user in boiling water as early as clearly indicated on product label. Cooking in boiling water will be equivalent or superior to 70°C for 2 min.
to be kept under refrigeration at 4°C or less.
2.3 Process flow diagram
| Receiving | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Storage | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Unpacking | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Preparation of stuffing | ↓ | Preparation of pasta |
| Pasta Filling | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Heat treatment | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Cooling | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Modified Atmosphere Packaging | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Labelling | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Storage | ||
| ↓ | ||
| Shipping | ||
2.4 Hazard Identification
For stuffed pasta, many foodborne pathogens may be of concern. Listeria monocytogenes, as well as other pathogens (e.g., S. aureus, B. Cereus), should be considered since they may contaminate the product. Clostridium botulinum should be considered since it may come from raw ingredients and will not be completely inactivated by the heat treatment. Pathogens of concern are controlled by heat treatment, adherence to strict hygiene conditions and refrigerated storage.
2.5 Identification of Preventative Measures
Control of Listeria monocytogenes can be accomplished by:
incoming materials as free as possible of such contamination
heat treatment (minimum of 70°C for 2 minutes, internal temperature, or equivalent). A more severe heat treatment may be required to control spoilage bacteria. This should be verified in shelf life studies.
adherence to strict hygiene conditions (as defined for High Risk Area) to prevent recontamination and growth
hermetic sealing
refrigerated storage
Control of Clostridium botulinum can be accomplished by:
water activity less than 0.97 (for non-proteolytic strains)
refrigerated storage (for proteolytic strains)
specification for a maximum shelf life.
2.6 Examples of CCPs
It is not possible to present an exhaustive list of all CCPs required to control all hazards. In reality, one would need to be in specific food premise situation. However, an illustration of some CCPs follows. It [should be] is remembered that HACCP is product/process and plant specific.
TABLE 2 - FRESH STUFFED PASTA - EXAMPLES OF CCPs
| STEP | HAZARD | PREVENTATIVE MEASURE (CCP) | CRITICAL LIMIT | MONITORING | CORRECTIVE ACTION | VERIFICATION | RECORDS |
| Stufting preparation | Growth of Clostridium botulinum | Product formulation/ Reducation of water activity to less than 0.97 | Strict adherence to formulation and prescribed procedures | Designated employee to fill formulation log Foreman to check that procedure followed at specified frequency | Retention of lot for further evaluation and proper disposition | QC to sample for water activity measurement at regular intervals | Formulation log Report of water activity analysis |
| Pasta preparation | Growth of Clostridium botulinum | Product formulation/ Reducation of water activity to less than 0.97 | Strict adherence to formulation and prescribed procedures | Designated employee to fill formulation log Foreman to check that procedure followed at specified frequency | Retention of lot for further evaluation and proper disposition | QC to sample for water activity measurement at regular intervals | Formulation log Report of water activity analysis |
| Packaging | Recontamination by Listeria | Procedures for cleaning and disinfection of food controll surfaces | Strict adherence to procedures | Foreman to check that procedures followed at specified frequency | Repeat cleaning and disinfection | Environmental sampling of food contact surfaces | Sanitation report Report of analyses |
| Growth of Listeria | Proper room temperature and respect lapse time | Room temperature less than 10°C Lapse time less than 2 hours | Temperature measurement Foreman to check lapse time | Set proper room temperature Measure of product temperature: if above 6°C, reject product. If between 4°C and 6°C rapid cooling and evaluation by an expert | Environmental and product sampling | Report of analysis Production reports | |
| Storage | Proliferation of Listeria and Clostridium | Temperature less than 4°C | 4°C or less | Temperature measurement of refrigerated facilities | Set room temperature to 4°C or less. If product temperature above 6°C, reject product If between 4 and 6°C, rapid cooling and evalutation by an expert | QC to verify procedures in place Temperature measurement inside product Micro analysis of product | Room and product temperature records Test reports |
3. ASSEMBLED SALAD
3.1 Product Definition
Incoming materials as received:
cooked packaged potatoes (cooked in original package)
canned tomatoes
cooked packaged ham (cooked in origional package)
peeled hard boiled eggs in MAP
pickles
mayonnaise (pH 4.0)
trays and plastic film
Important processing characteristics:
ingredients used as such and assembled
packaged hermetically
no further heat treatment after packaging
maximum pH of final product: 4.8
3.2 Intended use
shelf life: 15 days
ready-to-eat, without any heating or cooking
to be kept under refrigeration at 4°C or less
3.3 Process flow diagram
| Receiving |
| ↓ |
| Storage |
| ↓ |
| Unpacking |
| ↓ |
| Preparation |
| ↓ |
| Weighing |
| ↓ |
| Assembling |
| ↓ |
| Sealing and packaging |
| ↓ |
| Labelling |
| ↓ |
| Storage |
| ↓ |
| Shipping |
3.4 Hazard Identification
For this assembled salad, the foodborne pathogen of concern is Listeria monocytogenes. Other pathogens of concern can be controlled by either the low pH (4.8) or refrigerated storage.
3.5 Identification of Preventative Measures
Control of Listeria monocytogenes can be accomplished by:
incoming materials as free as possible of such contamination
adherence to strict hygiene conditions (as defined for High Risk Area) to prevent recontamination and growth
control of pH
refrigerated storage
specification for a maximum shelf life.
3.6 Examples of CCPs
It is not possible to present an exhaustive list of all CCPs required to control all hazards. In reality, one would need to be in specific food premise situation. However, an illustration of a number of CCPs follows. It is to be remembered that HACCP is product/process and plant specific.
TABLE 3 - ASSEMBLED SALAD - EXAMPLES OF CCPs
| STEP | HAZARD | PREVENTATIVE MEASURE(CCP) | CRITICAL LIMIT | MONTORING | CORRECTIVE ACTION | VERIFICATION | RECORDS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Receiving of hard boiled eggs | Contamination by Listeria and Salmonella | Approved suppliers | Suppliers must be approved | Check that incoming products are from approved suppliers | Lot retention and sampling for analysis | Periodic sampling Audit of suppliers | Delivery slip Report of analysis Audit report |
| Growth of Listeria and Salmonella | Transportation under refrigeration | Product at less than 4°C | Temperature measurement of product and vehicle | If product temperature above 6°C: rejected If between 4 and 6°C: rapid cooling and analysis | QC check | Temperature records Report of analysis | |
| Assembling | Recontamination by Listeria | Procedures for cleaning and disinfection of food contact surfaces | Strict adherence to pro-cedures | Foreman to check that procedure followed at specified frequency | Repeat cleaning and disinfection | Environmental sampling of food contact surfaces | Sanitation report Report of analysis |
| Growth of Listeria | Proper room temperature and respect lapse time | Room tempe-rature at less than 10°C Lapse time less than 2 hours | Temperature measurement Foreman to check lapse time | Set proper room
temperature Measure of product temperature: if above 6°C reject product. If between 4 to 6°C rapid cooling and evaluation by an expert | Environmental and product sampling | Report of analysis Production records | |
| Sealing/Packaging | Recontamination by pathogens | Hermetic sealing | No leakers | 100% Visual inspection | Reject or rework | Test for leaks | Test reports Producation records |