I am working as a QA in a retail company which produces and sells pastry products.
I am having difficulties with implementing the haccp plan.
Furthermore, I want to ask if there is possibility to change the frequency of a CCp?
Posted 08 December 2010 - 10:52 PM
Furthermore, I want to ask if there is possibility to change the frequency of a CCp
Kind Regards,
Charles.C
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Posted 09 December 2010 - 11:41 AM
Posted 09 December 2010 - 03:20 PM
Hi everyone.
I am working as a QA in a retail company which produces and sells pastry products.
I am having difficulties with implementing the haccp plan.
Furthermore, I want to ask if there is possibility to change the frequency of a CCp?
Posted 09 December 2010 - 08:03 PM
Hi everyone.
I am working as a QA in a retail company which produces and sells pastry products.
I am having difficulties with implementing the haccp plan.
Furthermore, I want to ask if there is possibility to change the frequency of a CCp?
Posted 09 December 2010 - 11:36 PM
Our CCP's are at the meat cooking stage, so making sure that the cooking temp of fillings reaches the right temperature, the next CCP is at the baking stage, so that same thing, making sure that the final baked temperature is correct.
HACCP Plan template cooked meat pie.pdf 60.22KB
639 downloadsKind Regards,
Charles.C
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Posted 10 December 2010 - 12:41 AM
HACCP Plan template cooked meat pie.pdf 60.22KB
639 downloads|
Thanked by 1 Member:
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Posted 10 December 2010 - 01:56 AM
Cooling potentially hazardous food
If you cook potentially hazardous food that you intend to cool and use later, you need to cool the food to 5°C or colder as quickly as possible. There may be food poisoning bacteria in the food even though it has been cooked. Faster cooling times limit the time when these bacteria are able to grow or form toxins.
The standards require food to be cooled from 60°C to 21°C in a maximum of two hours and from 21°C to 5°C within a further maximum period of four hours. Alternatively, if you want to cool food over a longer time period you must be able to show that you have a safe alternative system in place.
If you don’t know how fast your food is cooling, use a probe thermometer to measure the warmest part of the food – usually in the centre. For information on the use of thermometers, see the fact sheet ‘Thermometers and using them with potentially hazardous food’.
To chill food quickly; divide it into smaller portions in shallow containers. Take care not to contaminate the food as you do it.
Reheating previously cooked and cooled potentially hazardous food
If you reheat previously cooked and cooled potentially hazardous food, you must reheat it rapidly to 60°C or hotter. Ideally, you should aim to reheat food to 60°C within a maximum of two hours to minimise the amount of time that food is at temperatures that favour the growth of bacteria or formation of toxins.
This requirement applies only to potentially hazardous food that you want to hold hot, for example, on your stove or in a food display unit. It does not apply to food you reheat and then immediately serve to customers for consumption, for example, in a restaurant or a take away shop.
How can a business comply with the temperature control requirements?
The simplest way to meet the requirements is to ensure that potentially hazardous food is received, stored, displayed or transported either very cold (5°C or colder) or very hot (60°C or hotter). Potentially hazardous food should also be cooled and reheated quickly and prepared in as short a time as possible.
If for some reason you do not wish to, or are unable to store, display or transport food at 5°C or colder, or at 60°C or hotter, or meet the cooling and reheating time and temperature requirements, you must be able to show that you have a safe alternative system in place.
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Posted 10 December 2010 - 08:42 AM
micro.meat pies.pdf 877.42KB
269 downloads
fsa baking guide.pdf 777.66KB
433 downloads
xmas turkey.pdf 497.21KB
159 downloadsKind Regards,
Charles.C
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Posted 10 December 2010 - 09:19 AM
Posted 10 December 2010 - 10:06 AM
Posted 10 December 2010 - 11:18 AM
The thermal processing stages make sense from the aspect of reduction of the microbioloigcal load, regarding the chocolate (having never worked with the stuff, only milk, cheese and beer!),the main concern would be the presence of Salmonella, which seems to be quite well documented upon the internet, so think it indeed valid.
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25 years in food. And it never gets easier.
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Posted 10 December 2010 - 05:05 PM
Kind Regards,
Charles.C
Posted 17 December 2010 - 04:40 AM
... helping you achieve food safety & quality assurance...
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Posted 04 January 2011 - 04:48 PM
Dera Monor, We discuss issues directly on the forum as the information is then available for all members to learn from.Dear \ sir
if you want any thing related to HACCP in bakery you can e_mail me at. I'm quality section head in modern akeries company
thanks
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Posted 21 April 2016 - 11:50 PM
Hello everyone,
I'm a new member and very happy to be part of this network. Its very very helpful. I have already been able to get some useful information.Keep sharing please...
I have an assignment to design a HACCP plan for raw materials handling, production,distribution and marketing of a chicken pie. Any guiding information on this subject is gladly welcome.
Regards,
Khame
Posted 12 May 2025 - 02:10 PM
Hello everyone,
I'm a new member and very happy to be part of this network. Its very very helpful. I have already been able to get some useful information.Keep sharing please...
I have an assignment to design a HACCP plan for raw materials handling, production,distribution and marketing of a chicken pie. Any guiding information on this subject is gladly welcome.
Regards,
Khame
Khame, were you able to pull through with this?
Posted 12 May 2025 - 03:41 PM
This is a zombie thread of a zombie thread... Might be worth reposting a specific question Olantunji as the previous comment was from 2016, before that 2011.
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25 years in food. And it never gets easier.
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