The Cold Chain in the Hot Summer Months

x850-sDlXqD3mIMuzcyvsKeeping foods at proper cold holding temperatures (between 28°F and 41°F maximum or 0°F for frozen food) from the food manufacturers to your customers has to be one of our strongest links to safe food. Sometimes that is referred to in the food industry as “maintaining the COLD CHAIN”. Any slip ups in the cold chain, and we have a weak link. If you accept the food, you have greatly increased your foodborne illness risk and compromised your food quality.

The Cold Chain vs. Hot Summer —One of our problems in the hot summer months is receiving our cold foods cold at the 41°F maximum or below or frozen foods solidly frozen at preferably 0°F (maximum of 10°F). We experience delivery and transportation delays, truck delivery doors open in 80°F + weather conditions, and last delivery when the refrigeration on the truck cannot recover from the open doors.  Perishable foods (refrigerated or frozen) are easily affected by high temperature fluctuation.

The Worst Potential Nightmare—Receiving Hot-shot Deliveries —Sometimes we experience of what is called “hot shot” perishable deliveries when you are short of product. Either you pick up at the will-call distributor doors without a cooler unit in your vehicle or the distributor delivers your perishable food in un-refrigerated trucks just to get it to you faster. There has been suspect foodborne illness cases related just to that type of scenario, where a manager made a choice to accept 60°F+ perishable foods that they were short (a hot shot delivery) prior to a big event.

Our best advice here is to use a stem thermometer, take the temperature upon receiving the perishable products, and reject it if there’s any question. If you pick the food up, take a thermometer with you and make certain you have adequate coolers with ice packs. Remember the food safety words to live by – when in doubt, throw it out.

The Flow of the Food—In restaurants we refer to the stages that food travels through on its precarious route to our customers, as the flow of the food.  Those cold stages requiring refrigeration or control of the cold food temperature typically are:

1. Receiving cold or frozen

2. Cold storage and thawing of potentially hazardous and perishable food

3. Maintaining the cold temperature during preparation

4. Cold holding after prep

5. Rapid cooling if a leftover cooked food or pre-cooked ingredient (within 4-6 hours maximum)

6. Cold service to the customer

The Stem Thermometer or Thermocouple is the critical tool for checking our food temperatures, particularly upon receiving foods from our suppliers. The thermometer must be used throughout the workday and as for your temperature readings, the colder, the better! The colder your refrigeration equipment can keep chilled foods without freezing them, the longer the shelf life of the food.  Storing cold food at an internal temperature of 35°F instead of 41°F might double the shelf life of some foods.

Cold Capacity–Refrigerators, refrigerated prep cases, deli cases, and walkin coolers all differ in their capacity to keep foods cool and recover after being open. In all instances, the air inside the refrigerated compartment must be a few degrees colder than 41°F to assure that cold food internal temperatures are held at 41°F or below. For example, if you want your food to cold hold at 35°F, you refrigeration unit has to run an air temperature of 31°F to 32 °F. Older refrigeration equipment may not be designed to hold at that low of a temperature. Areas near the door are always warmer than anywhere else in the cooler.

Take Cold Storage Temperatures & Save $ — Dairy, fresh seafood, poultry, meat and deli type meat suppliers recommend 28-35°F internal temperature for optimum freshness and shelf life. The Produce Marketing Association recommends 32-36°F for most vegetables (other than whole tomatoes that are ripening). Use that thermometer several times a day and record temperatures. Teach your crew what it really means keep the strength in the “COLD CHAIN”.

***

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.

 

This information is provided as a general guideline and is not intended to be, nor does it, constitute legal or regulatory advice. Additional Federal regulations may apply to your particular circumstances. State, regional and local laws, ordinances and regulations may also apply.

Proper Cooking Temperature: A Basic Food Safety Measure

Each summer, we see an increase in the incidence of foodborne illnesses. Perhaps this is because of the warmer temperatures making temperature control for Time/Temperature Control for Safety (TCS) food more difficult or perhaps it is the increased amount of people who are barbequing this time of year – it is National Picnic Month, after all!

Changing Climate: The Unseen Impact on Food Safety

In June, I was asked to participate in the Allinfoodz podcast, put on by a colleague, Dr. Amit Sharma, at Penn State University.  One of the points Dr. Sharma wanted to discuss was the impact of climate change on food safety, which is something I was certainly aware of, but not something I had done much research on.  However, when preparing for the interview and podcast, it was interesting to learn more about the relationship between the two.

Thawing Food with Food Safety in Mind

There comes a time in almost every foodservice operation where you must thaw food. Yes, I know there are those operations who have moved to fresh products only and don’t have a freezer in-house, but I am willing to bet that is more the exception than the norm. I am almost sure that anyone reading this blog who works in a foodservice operation can regurgitate what methods are acceptable to thaw food per the FDA Model Food Code. In case you don’t recall, I will discuss them briefly, but I wanted to spend some time covering these requirements a bit more in-depth – so you not only know WHAT to do, but the WHY we do it that way.

Addressing Major Food Recalls in Your Business

It seems like every year we have a large-scale food recall that reminds consumers and foodservice operators about the importance of food safety. Not that we need reminded, but it certainly puts the topic in the headlines again. Last year, it was the onion recall. This year, it may very well be the Jiff peanut butter recall, of which we are in the midst of.  At the time of the publishing, we are starting to learn more about a potential hepatitis A outbreak linked to strawberries.  If you have not been impacted by either of these recalls in your personal or business life, I would be surprised.