What's New Unreplied Topics Membership About Us Contact Us Privacy Policy
[Ad]

HACCP Categories for Food Processes?

Started by , Aug 25 2015 07:45 PM

I wonder is this what you mean softball?

 

Decide whether products can be grouped using the process categories in 417.2(b)(1). This part of the regulations lists nine process categories into which meat and poultry production can be grouped; they and some examples are:

(i) Slaughter--all species: beef, swine, and poultry

(ii) Raw product—ground: ground beef, ground pork, ground turkey

(iii) Raw product--not ground: boneless cuts, steaks

(iv) Thermally processed--commercially sterile: canned beef stew, Pasta with meat

(v) Not heat treated--shelf stable: summer sausage, dry salami

(vi) Heat treated--shelf stable: meat and poultry jerky, snack sticks (vii) Fully cooked--not shelf stable: hot dogs, wieners, roast beef, ham

(viii) Heat treated but not fully cooked--not shelf stable: partially cooked patties, bacon

(ix) Product with secondary inhibitors--not shelf stable: corned beef, cured beef tongue

7 Replies

Can someone tell me what are all the HACCP Categories for food processes?  I'm thinking it's five, but an auditor threw me off by saying 14. :headhurts:

Share this Topic
Topics you might be interested in
HACCP certification for SQG Ed 9.0 - System Element 2.1.1.5 HACCP Training for Flexible Packaging Industry No CCPs in a HACCP Plan - Can This Be Possible? Should you list your preventative controls on your HACCP process flow chart? Fair Price to charge for developing 2 HACCP plans
[Ad]

Hi,

 

I have encountered this in an audit before.  Here are the 14 the auditor said I should (and now) have.

  1. Good Manufacturing Practices which includes:
  2. Product Trace
  3. Recall Program
  4. Complaint Management
  5. Vendor Approval
  6. Allergen Management
  7. Training
  8. Safety of Water and Ice
  9. Condition and Cleanliness of Food Contact Surfaces
  10. Chemical Control
  11. Exclusion of Pests
  12. Protection from Adulteration
  13. Calibration
  14. Waste Management
1 Thank

Hi Softball,

 

From an audit POV I would suggest that it depends on the Standard and the interpretation of "Category". And HACCP.

 

This year Food Fraud and related have definitely been  "in" for some FS Bodies. Others maybe not so much / different emphases.

 

You could equally claim that HACCP is a methodology for the control of significant safety hazards. So 3 Divisions ?.

 

ISO would maybe claim 3 rather than 2 ?

1 Thank

I have never heard of HACCP 'categories' ... do you mean pre-requisites as the list posted by IMarsh16 looks like them to me?

I wonder is this what you mean softball?

 

Decide whether products can be grouped using the process categories in 417.2(b)(1). This part of the regulations lists nine process categories into which meat and poultry production can be grouped; they and some examples are:

(i) Slaughter--all species: beef, swine, and poultry

(ii) Raw product—ground: ground beef, ground pork, ground turkey

(iii) Raw product--not ground: boneless cuts, steaks

(iv) Thermally processed--commercially sterile: canned beef stew, Pasta with meat

(v) Not heat treated--shelf stable: summer sausage, dry salami

(vi) Heat treated--shelf stable: meat and poultry jerky, snack sticks (vii) Fully cooked--not shelf stable: hot dogs, wieners, roast beef, ham

(viii) Heat treated but not fully cooked--not shelf stable: partially cooked patties, bacon

(ix) Product with secondary inhibitors--not shelf stable: corned beef, cured beef tongue

1 Thank

I cant say i have read the HACCP regulations specifically, however from a BRC perspective 2.3.2 interpretation Key point of paragraph to me states:

 

"Product groups can be used where the products are similar (e.g. different pack sizes)  However, where significantly different products (e.g. coated and non coated meat products) are manufactured these are to be treated as separate product groups."

 

Well different pack sizes, OK i get that, but significantly different? that to me sounds like if i have a product X which is the same as product Y but is packed A into a box and B into a Bag in a Box. These would be different groups? because of the potential extra step in process requiring potential different assessments of risk to be assessed.

 

Another example if a product A is colored and product B is non colored (same packaging, raw materials, process) then this would also be a different group.

 

Considering those differences of products and their variants of which those variants that change the characteristics of the finished product would potentially give you a lot of groups requiring a lot of HACCP PLANS albeit contents of which may be very similar except for those changes!

 

Im currently looking in to this because if my interpretation is right, for 2 products and their packaging variations and storage conditions (chilled, frozen) i could end up with nearly 40 plans which cant be right. 

 

so if anyone has some more clear guidance on this please share!

Have you tried looking here,  https://www.fsis.usd...pport-resources

5-year old thread.

thanks anyway.


Similar Discussion Topics
HACCP certification for SQG Ed 9.0 - System Element 2.1.1.5 HACCP Training for Flexible Packaging Industry No CCPs in a HACCP Plan - Can This Be Possible? Should you list your preventative controls on your HACCP process flow chart? Fair Price to charge for developing 2 HACCP plans HACCP plan for chocolate and risk area decision tree HACCP Flow charts and 'confidentiality' Implementing HACCP/BRC for a Logistics Company Is HACCP broken? How would I verify my HACCP Plan for new product?