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Food safety & salmonella

Date post: 06-Jan-2016
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George M. Martin Navarro Pecan company 2131 Hwy 31 East po Box 147 Corsicana, TX 75110 ph: 800-333-9507 Fax: 903-874-7143 WEBSITE: WWW.NAVARROPECAN.COM. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Food safety & salmonella
Page 2: Food safety & salmonella
Page 3: Food safety & salmonella

It’s Not Just A Sheller Problem!

Page 4: Food safety & salmonella

All nuts are not created equal Growing /Handling Differences Processing Differences What can you do to insure that the

nuts the consumer purchases are safe?

Page 5: Food safety & salmonella

Since 2001, there have been major recalls involving lettuce, almonds, tomatoes (later determined to be peppers), spinach, peanuts and/or peanut butter, pistachios, mayonnaise, milk, chocolate chip cookie dough and most recently a possible pecan related recall

Six of the aforementioned recalls involved nuts; two almond recalls, two peanut butter and or peanut related recalls, one pistachio recall and one possible pecan recall

Three nut related recalls in past 10 months (peanut butter, pistachios and pecans).

Page 6: Food safety & salmonella

Domestic Almonds Walnuts Pecans Pistachios Hazelnuts Macadamias

Imported Cashews Hazelnuts/Filberts Brazils Macadamias

Page 7: Food safety & salmonella

Peanuts are legumes, not ‘nuts’

Grown in the soil Porous shell Peanuts go through

a dry cleaning & shelling process

Page 8: Food safety & salmonella

Highly susceptible to Aflatoxin, Salmonella and E-Coli

Blanching and Roasting help to minimize micro problems

Industry is currently working on a set of GAP’s and GMP’s

Page 9: Food safety & salmonella

Member of the Peach family

Trees are not ‘self- pollinating’

Porous shell Dry hulling process Dry shelling process

Page 10: Food safety & salmonella

Highly Susceptible to Salmonella

Two Salmonella related industry recalls within 4 years (2001 & 2004)

FDA/Almond Board establish pasteurization requirements

Page 11: Food safety & salmonella

The two Almond related Salmonella outbreaks resulted in CFR 981 for almonds grown and processed in California. This CFR requires a 4-log reduction in Salmonella, not a 5-log reduction. This is different than the lethality required for other products such as juice. However, the research employed at UC Davis and Cornell determined that a 5-log reduction was not necessary in almonds.

Page 12: Food safety & salmonella

A process that results in a 1-log reduction will kill 99% of the target organism

A 2-log reduction will kill 99.9% of the target organism

A 3-log reduction will kill 99.99% of the target organism

A 4-log reduction will kill 99.999% of the target organism

Page 13: Food safety & salmonella

FDA 3/9/2009 Guidance on Production of Foods Containing Peanut Derived Ingredients recommends – ‘obtain ….ingredients only from suppliers who use production processes that have been demonstrated to adequately reduce the presence of Salmonella, or that ensure that their own manufacturing process would adequately reduce the presence of Salmonella.’

Page 14: Food safety & salmonella

Grocery Manufacturers Association Pushing for the entire industry to adopt GFSI

standards (Global Food Safety Initiative)Classifies suppliers as Low, Medium or High Risk;

all nut suppliers are considered High risk.Require all suppliers to be SQF (Safe Quality

Food) or BRC (British Retail Consortium) certifiedWal-Mart and Kroger are requiring all suppliers to

be either SQF or BRC certified

Page 15: Food safety & salmonella

Federal Food Safety Legislation As currently drafted, nuts will be

considered ‘High’ risk Will add traceability requirements,

HACCP plans, third party audits, several FDA inspections per year for high risk plants, additional record keeping requirements, etc.

May add some testing requirements for imports

Page 16: Food safety & salmonella

Visit www.almondsarein.com Food Quality & Safety

Food Quality & Safety Program

1) Documentation2) Employee Training3) Fertilizer & Soil Amendment

Practices4) Water Quality & Source5) Orchard Floor Management6) Field Sanitation and Employee

Hygiene7) Pest Control8) Summing Up

Page 17: Food safety & salmonella

Visit www.almondsarein.com – Food Quality & Safety

Good Agricultural Practices (GAP’s)

Use of Manure/Chicken manure in orchards

Avoid pooling of water on orchard floors

Don’t let product sit on orchard floor longer than necessary

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Page 19: Food safety & salmonella

The E. coli contamination in pecans that arose in the 1950’s was addressed with either (or both) sanitizing solutions and heated water immersion to destroy any coincidental environmental contamination on whole pecans. The USFDA’s “Guide to Inspections of Manufacturers of Miscellaneous Food Products – Volume 1” – p7, sec.4 states “Evaluate the firm's tempering and sanitizing of in-shell nuts to determine if these processing steps are adequate to prevent contamination of equipment down stream which could result in contamination of nut meats with E. Coli. If the firm is using hot water for this purpose is processing time and temperature adequate to sanitize in-shell nuts [see chart, attachment 4 for E. coli heat resistance (moist heat)]?” Attachment 4 states that the required time at 75C(167F) is 2 seconds. There are no additional heat requirements for processing pecans.

Page 20: Food safety & salmonella

Dr. Larry Beuchat-Center for Food Safety, University of Georgia Initiated by the NPSA. NPSA has agreed

to fund $16,000.00 of the costs Will evaluate various shelling processes to

determine which work best in the elimination of Salmonella

Industry needs to follow-up with Industry wide GAP’s & GMP’s

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Page 22: Food safety & salmonella

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