Good morning . I am facing a audit problem. IFS auditor finding that no details validation record of IQF Cooked shrimp. Please advice me about cooked shrimp validation .
Best regards
ratan
Posted 05 September 2011 - 04:10 AM
Posted 05 September 2011 - 10:09 AM
Dear Ratankumardatta,Dear simon
Good morning . I am facing a audit problem. IFS auditor finding that no details validation record of IQF Cooked shrimp. Please advice me about cooked shrimp validation .
Best regards
ratan
Kind Regards,
Charles.C
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Posted 15 September 2011 - 02:05 PM
Posted 15 September 2011 - 09:52 PM
Kind Regards,
Charles.C
Posted 14 September 2012 - 02:57 PM
Dear Ratankumardatta,
Welcome to the Forum!
It may depend on yr local regulations but if yr area is following the European model, it is necessary to show that the lethality of yr cooking process is equal to or greater than one sufficient to generate a core shrimp temperature of 70degC for 2 minutes in yr largest sized shrimp. Such a process delivers a 6D bacterial reduction for L.monocytogenes which is assumed to be the most heat resistant species commonly found in shrimp. (the Americans prefer to calculate based on Salmonella).
To demonstrate the above, you have to obtain a few core temperature profiles of yr shrimp versus the cooking time. The exact method will depend on how you cook, eg conveyor / vat etc. Then you can either directly interpret from the graph or do some calculations as in textbooks for canning. Or buy a thermocouple/software package which sits in the shrimp and does it for you.
Some localities may accept a lower figure than 6D, it depends on yr regulations and maybe the validatable level of L.monocytogenes in yr input shrimp.
It may also be necessary to hv some validated lab. results which show that there is no detectable L.mono... in the finished product.
Rgds / Charles.C
Posted 14 September 2012 - 06:28 PM
Dear Charles.C
Although my question is out of the primary issue I would like to ask you where can I find those parameters ( 70ºC. 2 minutes, 6D)you mentioned? ¿ any codex recomendation? ¿ any recognized study? ¿ any legislation?.
Thank you so much in advance
Best regards
Esther
mm1 - usfda - UCM251970 04242012.pdf 4.34MB
169 downloads
mm2 - uk fsa 2005 - guide to food hygiene.pdf 2.7MB
157 downloadsKind Regards,
Charles.C
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Posted 11 June 2015 - 06:53 AM
Contact BFRI and they'll conduct the cooking validation study. At the end of the study, you'll have ideal temperature for cooking shrimps and recommended cooking time for each grade of Shrimp.
And also establish the validation frequency.
Regards,
Nirbhay
Posted 11 June 2015 - 02:35 PM
If you were to follow a 6 log reduction on 70 for 2 minutes - You would be out of business due to yield loss !!!! Following a 5 log reduction completed by the Canadian food inspection agency and Health Canada uses a 5 log reduction. 72 or more for 12 seconds or longer !!
I have the document they use but I am new and do not know how to attach a file to this forum so if someone could please let me know then I will share the information.
Posted 11 June 2015 - 03:53 PM
Hi BritAbroad,
Thanks for yr post and Welcome to the Forum !
AFAIK, the Regulatory choice of XD is solely based on Safety logic. Opinions on appropriate XDs may vary for reasons such as raw material microbial quality. IMEX it's a question of HACCP Validation/Verification.
To post a file (using FFox) type your message into the posting box then click the tab "more reply options" on right hand side below the posting box. This produces a new page with an expanded view. Instructions for attaching a file are under the posting box on left hand side. Just follow the browse > attach tabs to upload and the uploaded file will eventually appear (green tick). Click the "add to post" bottom tab to enter the file into the posting box and then the "add reply" tab to finish. Hope that works.
thks again for yr input.
Kind Regards,
Charles.C
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