A Date with Safe Food Labels

When it comes to food, calendar dates relating to time and temperature are important and sometimes confusing. Terms we use are: 1) food product or code dating used for commercial food manufacturing and 2) date marking used for food prepared onsite in a restaurant. In a restaurant at the receiving step or the retail food store as a consumer, “Sell by July 14” is a type of information you might find on a meat or poultry product. Are dates required on food products? Does it mean the product will be unsafe to use after that date? Here is some background information, which answers these and other questions about food product dating.

resources-2There’s a big difference between “product or code dating” from the manufacturer in an unopened package and “date marking” (as required by the 2013 FDA Food Code) in the restaurant once a perishable, ready-to-eat (RTE) food package is opened for use or prepared from scratch.

What is Food Product Dating? “Open Dating” (use of a calendar date as opposed to a code) on a food product is a date stamped on a product’s package to help the store determine how long to display the product for sale. It can also help the purchaser to know the time limit to purchase or use the product at its best quality. It is not a safety date.

Is Dating Required by Federal Law? Except for infant formula and some baby food, product dating is not required by Federal regulations. However, if a calendar date is used, it must express both the month and day of the month (and the year, in the case of shelf-stable and frozen products). If a calendar date is shown, immediately adjacent to the date must be a phrase explaining the meaning of that date such as “sell by” or “use before.”

Believe it or not, there is no uniform or universally accepted system used for food dating in the United States. Although dating of some foods is required by more than 20 states, there are areas of the country where much of the food supply has some type of open date and other areas where almost no food is dated.

What Types of Food Are Dated? Open dating is found primarily on perishable foods such as meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products. “Closed” or “coded” dating might appear on shelf-stable products such as cans and boxes of food. In the food service environment, always look for the dates on our perishable foods on the outside of the case at the receiving step.

Types of Dates:

• A “Sell-By” date tells the retail store how long to display the product for sale. Consumers should buy the product before the date expires.

• A “Best if Used By (or Before)” date is recommended for best flavor or quality. It is not a purchase or safety date.

• A “Use-By” date is the last date recommended for the use of the product while at peak quality. The date has been determined by the manufacturer of the product.

“Closed or coded dates” are packing numbers for use by the manufacturer.

“Date Marking” in the FDA Food Code & Listeria — At the restaurant level for on-premise preparation, there are specific requirements for re-labeling perishable foods, once the package is opened or ready-to-eat foods are prepared onsite. Date marking is required to control the growth of bacteria called Listeria monocytogenes that grows at refrigerated temperatures. Listeriosis (the disease) can be a very serious infection to any immune compromised persons (elderly, pregnant women, children, or infants) and can cause fatalities. Do a search for more on Listeria. Since it will grow at below 41F, the main measure to keep Listeria under control is TIME, not temperature. The Food Code has expanded on date marking in the past few years to help control Listeria, so we will have more to come on this subject.

Who must use “Date Marking”? All retail food facilities must follow the date marking regulations, including restaurants, grocery stores, hospitals, schools, eldercare facilities, and any facility selling or serving food directly to the consumer.

What Foods Must be Date Marked? – 1) Refrigerated ready-to-eat (RTE) potentially hazardous foods that are prepared and held in a food facility for more than 24 hours. 2) Refrigerated RTE potentially hazardous foods that are prepared and packed by a food processing facility and opened in a foodservice facility and held for 24 hours or longer.

How do we Date Mark? The 7 Day Rule — There are more details and some exemptions to date marking, but this is the basic guideline. You design your date mark system in your written food safety HACCP plan, so it’s clear to employees and the regulatory authority. You can use the actual date consumed, sold, or discarded on the container, colored labels, dots, or other similar systems. Whatever marking you choose, stick to it. The 7 day rule covers these items:

1. Foods prepared in foodservice must be held at 41F or below and marked with the day or date by which the food shall be consumed on the premise, sold, or discarded for a maximum of 7 days. The day of preparation is Day 1.

2. Foods from a processing plant must be held at 41 F or below and marked at the time their original container is opened. The date of opening is Day 1. Additionally, the day or date marked by the food facility cannot exceed the manufacturer’s use-by date IF the manufacturers use-by date is based on food safety rather than just food quality. Check with your food manufacturer if uncertain.

3. Foods that may be combined or mixed together must retain the date marking of the earliest prepared or first prepared ingredient. Example: if you use day old fried chicken (properly refrigerated) to make todays chicken salad, you must subtract a day from your date mark on the chicken salad.

Bottom Line: When in Doubt, Throw it Out — Foods can develop an off odor, flavor or appearance due to spoilage bacteria. If a food has developed those characteristics, it should be obvious in a restaurant setting, do not use it for quality reasons. If foods are mishandled, foodborne bacteria can grow and cause foodborne illness — before or after the date on the package. If perishable food is in the “danger zone” (above 41° F or below 135° F), for four hours or more, discard it. For example, if sliced deli meats or prepared cold sandwiches with perishable ingredients are taken are taken to a catering event and left out un-refrigerated for several hours, they wouldn’t be safe if used thereafter, even if the date hasn’t expired.

 

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About the Author: Lacie Thrall

Lacie Thrall PictureLacie Thrall passed away in early 2017 after a long illness. She dedicated her 35-year career to improving the health and well-being of others by promoting food safety best practices. Lacie worked in environmental health for 17 years before joining FoodHandler in 1997 as the Director of Safety Management. While at FoodHandler, she trained employees and customers on safe food handling practices, including proper hand hygiene and glove use. Later as a FoodHandler consultant, Lacie provided the foodservice industry with food safety information and advice through her blog on FoodHandler.com.

 

 

  • Plate of Food - Chicken

A Little Poultry Safety Information

Chicken is the number one species of protein consumed by Americans – we eat about 80 pounds of it per year. Outbreaks of foodborne illness have long been associated with poultry and eggs usually by undercooking it or cross-contamination of other foods by raw poultry. Recent concerns about avian or bird flu put the direct focus on our fowl food with concerns about whether this awful disease can transfer from birds to humans.

  • Plate of Food - Chicken

The Basic Principles of Food Safety

Every food establishment uses, processes, and sells food in different ways. However, the general issues and key principles of food safety remain the same, whatever the style of the operation. All food safety training programs should contain the “big 3” factors that could cause food to become unsafe. Food must be kept out of harms way from human errors, but if you don’t train food workers what they are, they won’t know why these factors are so important to your operation. The basics can make us or break us in one or maybe two food handling mistakes.

Be Aware When You Prepare – Food Prep Tips

The subject of food preparation covers some very broad, basic principles within food safety, with many steps associated with “risk” in some recipes. Certainly, preparation steps are where the most mistakes have occurred if a foodborne illness should occur. Outbreaks usually happen when more than one mistake occurs during prep, but sometimes it only takes one. Cooking is the biggest risk for raw foods, but all foods become ready-to-eat foods at some point in final preparation steps and that’s where the most care is required.

Food Gloves & Latex Allergy Education

Politicians joke about the endless stretch of rubber chicken dinners they may consume in an election year. For people with a latex allergy, such a prospect may be no laughing matter. While latex serves as an effective barrier glove material and has the best fit because of its elasticity, the risks associated should not be ignored. The solution is not simple and many options are available for operators today. It should always be mentioned that handwashing (before putting on gloves) is always the primary barrier to contamination and gloves are considered a good secondary barrier.