Hi All,
reading an old thread, I was wondering a bit about VACCP and how useful it has been. I'm not saying it's not helpful, that it's not good practice to run through ingredients and understand the risk they present.
But... is it actually making consumers safer? And a secondary point to that, are consumers actually getting what they pay for even if it's safe?
With the rewards for food inauthenticity being huge, but the penalties in most countries are tiny and recalls rare if food safety is not impacted, what is genuinely stopping malicious actors from economically based food fraud? It's not our VACCP plans. And let's face it, a lot of us spend a long time looking at what has come before rather than what could happen.
With headlines like this far off the front page, and, to my knowledge, no recalls associated with these tests, are we just doing this for due diligence rather than actually keeping people safe and not defrauded on quality?
All UK honey tested in EU fraud investigation fails authenticity test | Food | The Guardian