Jump to content

  • Quick Navigation
Photo

Can anyone show me an example of a product shelf life retention log?

Share this

  • You cannot start a new topic
  • Please log in to reply
10 replies to this topic
- - - - -

R_Saiyan

    Grade - Active

  • IFSQN Active
  • 9 posts
  • 0 thanks
0
Neutral

  • Earth
    Earth

Posted 28 February 2019 - 03:38 PM

Can anyone show me an example of a product shelf life retention log?
This is for bread, baked goods and buns.

Thanks in advance


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk



Charles.C

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Moderator
  • 20,542 posts
  • 5662 thanks
1,544
Excellent

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male
  • Interests:SF
    TV
    Movies

Posted 28 February 2019 - 04:28 PM

Can anyone show me an example of a product shelf life retention log?
This is for bread, baked goods and buns.

Thanks in advance


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

 

Hi Saiyan,

 

Do you know what ^^^ actually means ?

 

Google zero hits for specific term.


Kind Regards,

 

Charles.C


mgourley

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 1,403 posts
  • 997 thanks
274
Excellent

  • United States
    United States
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Plant City, FL
  • Interests:Cooking, golf, firearms, food safety and sanitation.

Posted 28 February 2019 - 10:02 PM

This will all depend on your actual shelf life.

 

It can be as simple as a spreadsheet that looks something like this:

 

Sample        Date Produced      Shelf Life      Condition After Shelf Life

 

Since you are bread/buns/rolls. I'd assume your shelf life is probably not more than 14 days (unless frozen). 

 

Conditions could be something like "dry" "sticking" "mold" etc.

 

Marshall



Charles.C

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Moderator
  • 20,542 posts
  • 5662 thanks
1,544
Excellent

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male
  • Interests:SF
    TV
    Movies

Posted 28 February 2019 - 11:15 PM

Hi Marshall,

 

I was conflicted by "log" vs "retention". :smile:

 

I had guessed the "log" indicated some kind of monitoring summarization.

 

Time will (hopefully) tell.


Kind Regards,

 

Charles.C


mgourley

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 1,403 posts
  • 997 thanks
274
Excellent

  • United States
    United States
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Plant City, FL
  • Interests:Cooking, golf, firearms, food safety and sanitation.

Posted 28 February 2019 - 11:43 PM

Charles,

 

I suppose you could do a check at some pre-determined stage during the shelf life, depending what that shelf life is, to monitor it.

But in the world of bread, there is a pretty short shelf life..so verifying that the product does indeed reach it's sell by or use before date, without mold or hardness is pretty straight forward.

 

Marshall
 



Charles.C

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Moderator
  • 20,542 posts
  • 5662 thanks
1,544
Excellent

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male
  • Interests:SF
    TV
    Movies

Posted 28 February 2019 - 11:45 PM

Charles,

 

I suppose you could do a check at some pre-determined stage during the shelf life, depending what that shelf life is, to monitor it.

But in the world of bread, there is a pretty short shelf life..so verifying that the product does indeed reach it's sell by or use before date, without mold or hardness is pretty straight forward.

 

Marshall
 

 

Agreed except that I keep my bread for months. Slow eater.


Kind Regards,

 

Charles.C


mgourley

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 1,403 posts
  • 997 thanks
274
Excellent

  • United States
    United States
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Plant City, FL
  • Interests:Cooking, golf, firearms, food safety and sanitation.

Posted 28 February 2019 - 11:50 PM

Yikes :)

 

The things we make have about a 13 day shelf life when sold in retail stores... I guess if you wanted to eat after, that's fine, I just doe not want to see any customer complaints when the sell by date has been eclipsed :)

 

Marshall



Charles.C

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Moderator
  • 20,542 posts
  • 5662 thanks
1,544
Excellent

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male
  • Interests:SF
    TV
    Movies

Posted 28 February 2019 - 11:58 PM

Yikes :)

 

The things we make have about a 13 day shelf life when sold in retail stores... I guess if you wanted to eat after, that's fine, I just doe not want to see any customer complaints when the sell by date has been eclipsed :)

 

Marshall

 

I trust my refrigerator and the preservatives.

 

Extreme cases > toast admittedly demand some dental caution.


Kind Regards,

 

Charles.C


zanorias

    Grade - PIFSQN

  • IFSQN Principal
  • 811 posts
  • 245 thanks
167
Excellent

  • Wales
    Wales
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:UK
  • Interests:Motorcycling, Food Safety, Science, Paddleboarding, Space

Posted 01 March 2019 - 06:48 AM

R_Saiyan, are you talking about a yearly shelf life validation or something like that?

For my chilled meat based products which have similar lives, 12/14/19. For the shelf life tests I send several portions to the lab and organise them to be tested on preselected dates which would match dates from cook & pack. So for a 14 day life I test on day 2, 6, 10, 13,14,15,17. So you can see the product is ok (hopefully) during the life and tests concentrated on the end life, with a test a few days after for good measure. We also conduct organoleptic tests on the same days with samples kept on site, and at the end file all lab certs and organoleptic sheets.



SunilDogra

    Grade - AIFSQN

  • IFSQN Associate
  • 41 posts
  • 2 thanks
2
Neutral

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male

Posted 25 March 2019 - 05:10 AM

Hi

It will completely depend on your shelf life. Hold only quality refrigerator.



Charles.C

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Moderator
  • 20,542 posts
  • 5662 thanks
1,544
Excellent

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male
  • Interests:SF
    TV
    Movies

Posted 25 March 2019 - 02:58 PM

Hi R_saiyan,

 

Any more thoughts ?


Kind Regards,

 

Charles.C




Share this

0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users