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

Hot water Steam Cleaning in RTE Popcorn Plant

Started by , Sep 12 2019 02:02 PM
2 Replies

I'm looking for information regarding hot water steam cleaning in a RTE Popcorn plant and specifications for log reduction of Salmonella spp and Listeria spp due to hot water steam cleaning.  I don't have any experience with this type of cleaning so wanted some information to back up the BRC plan that is currently being worked on.  If there is any insight to research being done on hot water steam cleaning or additional info that can be referenced, I'd appreciate any insight.  

Share this Topic
Topics you might be interested in
water/Air testing Does anyone have a guide for cleaning electric plugs and cords in a bakery? Need a Specialized Tool for Cleaning Gridded Mezzanine Floors – Any Recommendations? Digital Plant Management Platforms Water Replacement Frequency in Pasteurizer Heating-Cooling Baths
[Ad]

Hi L Green

 

Please visit the following link found in the forum of this website. It may be useful for you

 

https://www.ifsqn.co...-haccp-hazards/

 

Kind regards

Dr Humaid khan

Managing Director

Halal International Services

Australia

It can be brilliant at killing pathogens if you use it in the right way.  I don't know if you recall the Maple Leaf foods Listeria issue but they devised a technique to heat up difficult to clean pieces of equipment in a bag while pumping in steam.  I've used this in the past with whole pieces of equipment and small parts of it with great success.  Also steam cleaning directed at wheels for sufficient time so the spindle becomes hot has been great at resolving tote bins as a vector.

 

I've also had some failures as well.  Steam cleaning on the floor has been blooming useless.  The machines you get don't have the capacity to belt out enough steam to do it and the floor never gets sufficiently hot.  Steam cleaning large areas as a primary cleaning method?  Also not practical in my view.  Steam is great as a final "hit" and thermal disinfection but not as a primary cleaning method.

 

As for log reductions?  You can get up to 106 with the bagging method I would imagine and I've certainly seen reductions in counts of indicator organisms of the order of 102-103 (that's all there was to start with so higher log reductions are eminently possible.)


Similar Discussion Topics
water/Air testing Does anyone have a guide for cleaning electric plugs and cords in a bakery? Need a Specialized Tool for Cleaning Gridded Mezzanine Floors – Any Recommendations? Digital Plant Management Platforms Water Replacement Frequency in Pasteurizer Heating-Cooling Baths Cleaning Aluminum Mixing Paddles – Preventing Allergen Residue Can Label Application Cover Multi-Plant Processing for Salami Logs? Cleaning wax from candy wrappers on packaging machines Can Label Application Cover Multi-Plant Processing for Salami Logs? Changeover Cleaning: FDA vs USDA and Impact on Lot Definition