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This table is an example of a portion of a HACCP plan relating to the
control of pathogen survival through cooking for a processor of wild-caught
cooked shrimp, using a continuous steam cooker, using control of cooking.
It is provided for illustrative purposes only. Pathogen survival
through cooking may be only one of several significant hazards for this
product.
Updated: 7/24/98
| (1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) |
(8) |
(9) |
(10) |
| Critical Control Point (CCP) |
Significant Hazard |
Critical Limits for each Preventive Measure |
Monitoring |
Corrective Action(s) |
Records |
Verification |
| What |
How |
Frequency |
Who |
| Cooking |
Pathogen survival |
Minimum time: 2.5 min. |
Length of the cook cycle |
Belt speed measurement with stopwatch |
Once per day and after any adjustment |
Cooker operator |
Extend process or elevate temperature
to compensate for deviation from CL
AND
Segregate and hold for evaluation. |
Cooking record |
Documentation of process establishment
Review monitoring, verification, and corrective
action records within one week of preparation
Check the accuracy of the data logger against the mercury-in-glass
thermometer daily
Calibrate the mercury-in-glass thermometer yearly |
| Minimum temperature: 210°F |
Temperature of steam in the cooker |
Digital time/temperature data logger |
Continuous. Visual check once per day |
Cooker operator |
data logger printout |
Note: The critical limits in this example are
for illustrative purposes only, and are not related to any recommended
process.
FDA. 1998. Pathogens Survival Through Cooking (A Biological Hazard).
Ch. 16, In Fish and Fishery Products Hazards & Controls Guide: Second
Edition. 189-196. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health
Service, Food and Drug Administration, Center for Food Safety and Applied
Nutrition, Office of Seafood, Washington, DC.
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