Objective:
To provide information on the food safety principles included
in the 1994 Rhode Island Food Code that are of critical importance
to the Certified Food Safety
Manager
Introduction:
August of 1994, Rhode Island adopted a new model food code which replaces the
Rules and Regulations Pertaining to Food Establishments and Regulations Relating
to the Sanitation of Food Businesses. Rhode Island's new code is based on the
Food and Drug Administration's 1993 Food Code. The requirements contained in the
code for foodservice establishments, retail, vending operations and processors
emphasize preventing foodborne illness problems
rather than detecting them in food.
The numbers in parenthesis refer to the
specific section in the Food Code. A copy of the Code may be
obtained from the Rhode Island Department of Health,
Division of Food Protection, (401) 222-2750.
Chapter I-Purpose and Definitions
Are included
in the Code to explain and clarify the Code's requirements.
Comminuted
A food item that has been made smaller by chopping, grinding
or mincing. This includes food items whose ingredients are changed
such as gefilte fish, formed
roast beef, gyros, ground beef, sausage and a mixture of two or more types
of meat that have been chopped, flaked, ground or minced and mixed together
such
as sausages made with two or more meats. A higher cooking temperature is required
for comminuted foods (See Chapter 3 for more detail).
Critical Item
A step or process in the Code, that if not followed is more likely than other
steps or processes to contribute to food contamination, illness or environmental
deterioration. Critical items in the Code are denoted with an asterisk *.
Food
Establishment
An operation that stores, prepares, packages, serves, vends, or otherwise
provides food for human consumption: such as a restaurant; satellite or catered
feeding
location; catering operation if the operation provides food directly to
the consumer or to a conveyance; institution; or food bank; a transportation
vehicle
or central
preparation facility that supplies a vending location; a mobile, stationary,
temporary or permanent facility or location; where consumption is on or
off the premises; and regardless of whether there is a charge for the food.
Food Processing Plant
A commercial operation that manufactures, packages, labels or stores food
for human consumption and does not provide food directly to the consumer.
HACCP
Plan
A written document that includes procedures for following the Hazard
Analysis Critical Control Point principles is required for certain food
preparation
and processing operations.
Highly susceptible populations of people who
are more likely than other groups of people to get a foodborne illness.
This includes the elderly,
those with
weakened immune systems, the very young and pregnant women. They may
live in a health
care facility, assisted living situation or a custodial care facility.
The Code has more stringent requirements for food served to this population
because
they
are at greater risk of foodborne illness.
Person in charge
The person who is responsible for the operation of the food establishment
at the time of inspection. The Code includes an outline for the responsibilities
and knowledge requirements of the person in charge.
Potentially hazardous
foods
Includes but is not limited to foods of animal origin that
are raw or heat treated; a food, of plant origin that is heat
treated or consists
of raw
seed sprouts,
cut melons; garlic and oil mixtures. Potentially hazardous foods do
not
include: air-cooled hard boiled egg with the shell intact; a food with
a water activity
of 0.85 or less; a food with a pH of 4.6 or below when measured at
75 F; a food, in an unopened hermetically sealed container, that is
commercially
processed
to achieve and maintain commercial sterility in dry storage and distribution;
a food for which a variance has been granted when laboratory evidence
demonstrates
that rapid and progressive growth of infectious and toxigenic microoganisms
or
the slower growth of C. Botulinum cannot occur.
Chapter 2-Management
and Personnel Supervision
- There must be a person in charge in the facility during all
hours of operation of the food establishment
- The person in
charge must know and apply the following information listed
in section 2-101.11 of the Code. (This knowledge may be
demonstrated through certification
as a manager certified in food safety as required under separate
regulations):
- Preventing foodborne illness
- Application of HACCP principles
including identifying critical control points in the operation
from purchasing through
sale or service that
may contribute
foodborne illness. This includes explaining and showing steps
taken to assure that the points are controlled as required
by the Code.
- The RI Food Code requirements and other related
subjects as requested by a RI Department of Health official.
- The
person in charge must assure that employees are implementing
the following processes and procedures and monitor them daily
(2-103.11):
- Thoroughly cleaning hands.
- Properly cooking potentially
hazardous food especially those foods known to cause severe
foodborne illness and
death including
eggs
and comminuted
meats,
and checking routine monitoring of the cooking temperatures.
- Using
proper methods to rapidly cool potentially hazardous foods
that are not held hot and are not eaten within four hours
and checking
routine
monitoring
of food temperatures during cooling.
- Properly re-heating and
hot holding potentially hazardous foods.
- Consumers who order
raw or partially cooked foods of animal origin are informed
in writing (by brochures, deli case or
menu advisories,
label
statements, table
tents, placards, etc) of the significantly increased risk associated
with vulnerable consumers eating certain foods raw or undercooked
(3-603.11).
- Consumers under the age of twelve may not be served
raw or partially cooked comminuted foods of animal origin.
- The
establishment/facility is operating in compliance with
all regulatory requirements.
- Employee Health
The person in charge must require all food employees and
job applicants to provide information about their health
as related
to certain
diseases including
(2-201.11):
- Active cases of tuberculosis and measles.
- Is diagnosed with or had a
past illness due to Salmonella typhi; Shigella spp, Escherichia coli
0157:H7 or Hepatitis
A viruses infection.
- Symptoms such as abdominal cramps
or discomfort; diarrhea, fever, loss of appetite for three or more
consecutive days, vomiting,
jaundice or
open or
draining wound
on the hands.
- The person in charge, may not allow an
employee to work, or may restrict an employee's job assignments
in the
facility
depending
upon the nature
of their
illness/symptoms (2-201-12, 2-201-13).
- Personal Cleanliness
Food employees must wash their hands and exposed
portions of their arms twice, for twenty seconds
each time using
hot water
and soap
and rinsing
with hot
water. They must use a nail brush during the
first washing to clean fingertips, nails,
and between fingers. This procedure must be followed
after (2-301-13):
- Beginning or returning to work.
- Using the bathroom.
- After coughing, sneezing, using a handkerchief
or tissue.
Chapter 3-Food
- Temperature Danger Zone-41°-140° F.
- Pasteurized Eggs substituted for Shell Eggs (3-302.13) Pasteurized liquid,
frozen, or dry eggs or egg
products must be substituted
for shell eggs
in the preparation
of:
- Food items in which eggs
are not thoroughly cooked including:
Caesar
salad, hollandaise
or bernaise
sauce, eggnog and
other egg-fortified beverages,
ice cream , and noncommercial
mayonnaise.
- Eggs for a high
risk population that are combined and not
cooked and eaten right
away.
- Preventing
Contamination from
Hands
- Employees may not touch
ready-to-eat food with their
bare hands.
They must use utensils
ie:
deli tissue,
spatulas, tongs
or single
use gloves
(3-301.11).
- Single-use gloves
are used for only one task, such as
working
with ready-to-eat
food or raw
poultry and not
used for other
purposes. Cooking
Final End
Cooking Temperatures (3-401.11
to 3-401.14)
- Poultry and stuffed
meats -165° F
for 15 seconds.
- Ground pork
and ground beef and -155° F
for 15 seconds.
- Most other
potentially hazardous foods-145° F
for 15 seconds.
- Beef roasts-
140° F (temperature to be maintained for
12 minutes) or 130° F
(temperature to be
maintained for 121 minutes) or as otherwise
specified
in sections 3-401.11
to 3-401-15 of the Code.
- Establishments
serving a highly susceptible population
(ie
hospital, nursing home)
cannot be exempt from
the above listed
cooking temperatures
(3-401-11
B)
- Microwaved Food Temperatures
(3-401.15)
- Heating an additional
25° F
or higher than conventional
end oven product
temperature. *Rotated and stirred during
cooking.
- Covered to retain
surface moisture.
- Allowed to stand covered
for two minutes after cooking
to obtain an even temperature.
- Cooling (3-501.14)
Cooked potentially hazardous
must be cooled:
- From
140° F to 70° F within two hours; and from 7O° F
to 41° F
or below
within four hours.
- Potentially hazardous food must be
cooled to 41° F
or below
within four hours if prepared
from ingredients
at room temperature,
such as
canned tuna.
- Ready
to Eat Potentially Hazardous
Food, Date
Marking
- Refrigerated
ready to eat
potentially
hazardous food
prepared and
held for more
than 24
hours must
be marked with the
date
of preparation.
- A
container of ready to
eat potentially
hazardous
food prepared and
packaged
elsewhere must be
marked
with the
manufacturer's "sell-by" or "use
by date".
If the
product
is not
sold
or served
within
ten days,
it
must be
thrown
out.
- Time as
a Public Health
Control
(3-501.19)
- Food
must
be served or
thrown
out within
four
hours from the
time it
is removed
from
temperature control
and the
total
time, including
cooling
time
(time the food
was between
45° and
140° F)
cannot
be more
than
four
hours.
Approved
written
procedures
must
be kept
at the
food establishment.
- Variance
and HACCP
Plans
Required
for Food Processing
and Food
Manufacturing
operations
at
Retail
(3-502.11)
- Before
smoking
or
curing food;
brewing alcoholic
beverages;
using
food additives
as
a method
of
preservation; using
reduced oxygen
method
of
packaging
food
as specified
in
3-501-12.
- Custom
processing
animals
that
are for personal
use
as food
and
not for sale
or
service
in
a food
establishment; or
preparing
food
by another
method
that
is
determined by
the
regulatory
authority
to
require a variance.
- Packaged
Food Labels (3-602-11)
*Foods
packaged in
a food
establishment shall
be labeling
according to
law including
21 CFR
101 Food
Labeling, 9
CFR 317
Labeling, Marking
Devices and
Containers and
9 CFR
317 Subpart
N.
Chapter
IV-Equipment, Utensils,
and Linens
- Equipment,
Food Contact
Surfaces, and
Utensils (4-602.11)
shall be
cleaned:
- Before
each use
with a
different type
of raw
animal food
including beef,
fish, lamb,
pork or
poultry.
- Each
time there
is a
change from
working with
raw foods
to working
with ready-to
eat foods.
- Between
uses with
raw fruits
or vegetables
and with
potentially hazardous
food.
- Before
using or
storing a
food temperature
measuring device.
- Any
time during
the operation
when contamination
could have
occurred.
- Food
contact surfaces
and equipment
used for
potentially hazardous
foods should
be cleaned
as needed
throughout the
day, but
must be
cleaned no
less than
every 4
hours.
- Sanitation of food contact surfaces and utensils (4-703.11)
After being cleaned, equipment food contact surfaces and
utensils must be sanitized by:
- Minimum ten second contact
time for chlorine sanitizes.
- Minimum thirty second contact
time for all other approved sanitizers
Chapter VIII-Compliance and Enforcement
- When
a HACCP Plan is Required (8-201.13)
- The permit holder
must submit to the RI Department of Health for approval
a HACCP Plan for approval if a variance is required.
- A variance
is required for: smoking or curing food; brewing alcoholic
beverages; using food additives as a method
of preservation; using reduced oxygen method
of packaging food; custom processing animals that are for personal
use as food and not for sale or service in a food establishment;
or preparing food by another
method that is determined by the regulatory authority to require a
variance.
(see 3-502-11).
- Contents of the HACCP Plan (8-201-14)
- Listing
of the potentially hazardous foods by categories that are
being prepared/ processed.
- Flow diagram for each category
of food identifying critical control points and providing
information on: ingredients,
materials and equipment used in preparation.
- Recipes that
include methods and control measures that address food
safety concerns.
- Employee training plan
- Statement of standard operating
procedures (SOP's) for the plan that include: each critical
control point
and its critical limits; method and frequency
of monitoring and controlling each critical control point; corrective
action to
be taken; records to be maintained that demonstrate that the HACCP
plan is operational.
- Scientific data or information
which will validate that food safety is not being compromised
by the
proposed plan.
Prepared by: Martha Smith Patnoad, MS, CFSP,
Cooperative Extension Food Safety Education Specialist, Department
of Food Science
and Nutrition, University of Rhode Island.
Reviewed by: Ernest
Julian, PhD, Chief, Division of Food Protection, Rhode Island
Department of Health Dr Lori Pivarnik, Research Associate IV,
Food Science Specialist, Department of Food Science and Nutrition,
University of Rhode Island 9/95, 12/99
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