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Cleaning Aluminum Surface

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Alexxx

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Posted Yesterday, 01:49 PM

Hi everyone,

 

Hope you are all having a wonderful day. I have recently came upon an issue with our cleaning procedure. We have aluminum mixing paddles that we use to prepare the dough for regular (with eggs) and vegan (without eggs) products. We regularly do egg analysis to ensure that there is no egg residue after cleaning the mixing paddles between vegan and regular days. 

 

Recently we have come into an issue where the test is positive. Our cleaning procedures have not changed and everything is the same. I know aluminum surfaces are porous, and I want to know if there is an efficient way to throughly clean those paddles. We currently remove all dough residues from them, soak them in hot/warm water with soap, use a dedicated towel/sponge/scrub for cleaning and we than rinse and let them dry before sanitizing them. 

 

Any suggestions will for cleaning will help. As of right now, we will get more paddles to have dedicated ones for each products (vegan and regular). But I would still like to receive some input on how to improve our cleaning procedure.

 

Thank you to all of you!


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Shrimper

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Posted Yesterday, 02:07 PM

I agree with your next steps. Get paddles dedicated to each product and this issue will not happen again. As for proper cleaning, those steps seem great. Is there a chance re-contamination could have happened to get the positive result? How do you do your testing?


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Alexxx

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Posted Yesterday, 02:10 PM

I agree with your next steps. Get paddles dedicated to each product and this issue will not happen again. As for proper cleaning, those steps seem great. Is there a chance re-contamination could have happened to get the positive result? How do you do your testing?

That was my first assumption too. There must have been a re-contamination after the cleaning was done (most probably the person who cleaned it contaminated it when handling it after it has been cleaned).

Regarding the test, we do swab the paddles after they are completely dried and sent them to an external laboratory who does ELISA. 


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jfrey123

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Posted Yesterday, 02:24 PM

How far back do your cleaning records go on these paddles to show effective control of the egg residue?  Sometimes we spend hours and hours root causing and trying to determine if there's a flaw in our methods, only to ignore that sometimes people just screw it up.

 

Since you indicate there are egg days and vegan days, I do like your idea of separate paddles just to further help keep things safe.  Don't get me wrong, that doesn't mean the egg paddles can start routinely testing positive for egg residue lol.  But at least it adds an extra degree of allergen safety to your process.


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Alexxx

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Posted Yesterday, 02:57 PM

How far back do your cleaning records go on these paddles to show effective control of the egg residue?  Sometimes we spend hours and hours root causing and trying to determine if there's a flaw in our methods, only to ignore that sometimes people just screw it up.

 

Since you indicate there are egg days and vegan days, I do like your idea of separate paddles just to further help keep things safe.  Don't get me wrong, that doesn't mean the egg paddles can start routinely testing positive for egg residue lol.  But at least it adds an extra degree of allergen safety to your process.

I've only been at this current place for a year as of now. But their cleaning records showed effective control for the past ~5 years. I'm not sure if a re-contamination occurred right after cleaning, but it could be the reason why it tested positive.

 

I've also looked into the cleaning products we use and noticed that the safety data sheet  categorized it as "CORROSIVE TO METALS - Category 1". I've contacted the company for further information, but I know that alkaline solution can deteriorate aluminum surfaces, making them harder to clean overtime.


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