I'm currently struggling to wrap my brain around a verification on a cooking process in my facility. We have a pressure cooker to cook beans. FDA requires that beans are cooked at 200°F for 3 minutes to render safe to eat. Our cooker (which is pressurized), cooks at a minimum of 230°F. All of our programs have dwell times of 9 minutes plus. There is a digital readout of the temperature and an analogue thermometer dial on the side of the cooker.
Weekly, as part of a weekly walkthrough, the QA manager (me) documents the analogue temperature against the digital readout to ensure they're the same (always have been so far). Monthly, the QA manager (still me) compares the analogue thermometer when the machine is off (ambient) to a certified lollypop style thermometer (we just get a new one each year as opposed to re-calibrating / re-certifying).
Recently, my FDA inspector challenged (I'm a little annoyed because she said it was just a discussion point for us but then wrote it up as a violation) that just because the calibrated thermometer matches the analogue thermometer at ambient conditions does not mean it would match it at temperature (don't think I agree on this point) and that comparing the digital and analogue at temperature doesn't ensure that either is right (which I sort of agree with this part - it's all dependent on the first thing).
Anyway, if someone could just tell me that I'm not completely crazy for thinking this is a bit much, I'd appreciate that but what I REALLY am looking for is ideas on how to address this.
I can't put anything into the cooker. It's got a corkscrew, some screens, and a water fed chute that I'm afraid of getting anything stuck in. The cooker is at pressure, so I can't measure the inside from the outside. I tried using a temp gun to find the hottest part of the metal but it's double walled so I'm seeing a 20° drop from the thermometers to the outside of the cooker.
Anyone experience anything similar and what do y'all do?








