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animal tissue suitable for human consumption
fresh or processed |
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cattle < 5 months(milk fed) |
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chicken, turkey, duck, etc.
white meat |
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from non-domesticated animals |
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locomotion
support(back muscles) |
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more tough
more taste b/c more myoglobin |
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muscle, fats/lipids, bone, connective tissue |
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Chemical composition of meat |
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water 65-75%
protein 15-20%
fat 2-12%
mineral(ash) 1%
CHOs <1%
protein and fat provide energy |
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large quantity of essential nutrients relative to the # of calories present in the food |
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determines caloric value of meat
provides the flavor for meat |
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cut of meat
degree of finish(mgmt- diet, time on feed, genetics, etc.)
*fat content has decreased in recent years due to consumer wants/needs* |
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meat rich in B-vitamins
vitamin B12 only found in animal products
essential for protection of nerve cells/formation of blood cells in bone marrow |
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important for O2 transport thru body
3-5x more absorbant than non-heme Fe from vegetative foods
enhances absorption of non-heme Fe |
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important for tissue development, growth, and wound healing(immune system) |
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naturally occurring substance in body |
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avg. body usage=2000 mg/day
avg. chol. consumption=600 mg/day
body manufactures 1400 mg/day to meet needs |
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Which has more cholesterol, beef or chicken? |
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Definition
They both have ~76 mg/3 oz cooked meat
*pork has ~79 mg/3 oz cooked meat* |
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Daily red meat per-capita consumption in U.S. |
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Definition
=3 oz/day(uncooked)
supplies ~25 g of protein(1/2 of RDA) |
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Amer. Heart Assoc. recommendation |
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3.5 oz/day of cooked meat per person |
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2-3 servings of meat products daily
2-3 servings of dairy products daily |
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#1 consumed meat in world |
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Country w/ most beef consumption |
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Reasons for change in consumption |
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beef→poultry
people think poultry has less fat and less cholesterol than red meat
uniformity of poultry(portion size, taste, tenderness)
convenience(ease and speed of prep) |
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Beef consumption increased since 1990s |
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because research, societal changes, beef innovations |
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Humane methods of Slaughter Act |
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Definition
1958- 1st version- protect livestock during slaughter
1978- 2nd version- enforced by FSIS
insensible to pain prior to slaughter
violations and exclusions |
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Food safety and inspection service |
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employees trained: rhythmic breathing, rigthing reflex, corneal reflex, tongue out/head limp |
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Auditing 7 core criteria by Amer. Meat Institute |
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Definition
1. effective stunning
2. bleed rail insensibility
3. slipping/falling
4. vocalization
5. electric prod use
6. willful acts of abuse
7. access to water
*customers require yearly audits(silliker, PACCO)* |
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one shot to render the animal insensible
+security knocks |
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Mechanical
Electrical
Chemical(mainly used in pork industry) |
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Effective stunning scoring |
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Definition
excellent: 99-100%
acceptable: 95-98%
not acceptable: 90-94%
serious problem: <90%
*buyers only accept excellent and acceptable* |
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Bleed rail insensibility scoring |
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excellent: 1 of 1000
acceptable: 1 of 500
*0 in 100 head audit* |
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(slipping; falling)
excellent: 0%
acceptable: <3%; <1%
not acceptable: >3%; >1%
serious problem: >15%; >5% |
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indicator of animal(cattle) discomfort during handling, restraining, and stunning |
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excellent: ≤1%
acceptable: ≤3%
not acceptable: 3-10%
serious problem: >10% |
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eliminate or keep to a minimum
can cause meat quality problems
use as last resort
rarely used w/ sheep unless large sheep won't enter box |
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Electric prod scoring(cattle) |
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Definition
excellent: <5%
acceptable: 5-25%
not acceptable: 26-49%
serious problem: >50% |
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Electric prod scoring(swine) |
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Definition
excellent: <10%
acceptable: 10-25%
not acceptable: 26-79%
serious problem: >80% |
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fresh supply of water available at all times
must be fed if lairage time >24 hrs |
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improper pH drop postmortem due to lactic acid build up
less value
dark cuts spoil faster |
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cattle: 35.7mil
hogs: 100.3mil
sheep: 3.3mil
poultry: 9.0bil |
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1. receiving/antemortem inspection(pass, suspect, condemn)
2. stunning
3. bleeding
4. udder/pizzle removal
5. skin/head removal
6. remove fore/hind shanks(cattle)
7. hide removal(hide puller)
8. rod weasand
9. bunging
10. split sternum
11. evisceration(remove organs)
12. split carcass
13. tail removal(cattle)
14. postmortem inspection
15. trim, wash, chill
*can take ~20min w/ good machinery* |
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animal harvested
products: carcass, edible offal(heart, liver, kidney), non-edible offal(hide, blood) |
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animal
overhead(building, equipment, utilities, etc.)
labor, etc.
↑volume, ↓margin |
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2 phases: carcass→product |
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(w/ packer)
reduce carcass to subprimals(boxed beef) |
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Definition
add value to products, prepare into portion sizes(chicken nuggets, lunch meats, sausage, etc.) |
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raw material
ingredients
labor
overhead
packaging
advertising, etc. |
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Current methods of transportation |
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Definition
Pathways of products:
combo bins: 2000lb box full of meat
boxed beef: shrink wrapped in box
MAP packaging: inject w/ gas for longer shelf life |
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middle man: company or individual that buys from big packers and sells to smaller companies |
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20% markup on sales
$1.00=$1.25
or a product... $3.26/0.8=$4.08 |
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storage
handling
transportation, etc. |
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present product to consumer
Publix, Winn-Dixie, Albertsons, etc.
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30% markup on sales
$1.25=$1.75
or a product... $4.08/0.7=$5.83 |
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Definition
product loss
advertising
SPOILAGE
equipment
packaging
handling
labor
transportation, etc. |
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Sales breakdown(% of consumers' $) |
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Definition
producer: 30%
processing: 31%
wholesaler: 10%
retailer: 23%
transportation: 6% |
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Federal Meat Inspection Act |
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Definition
1906: The Jungle by Upton Sinclair desribed bad conditions in meat packing plant→pres. freaked out
"assuring that meat and meat food products distributed to them are wholesome, not adulterated, and properly marketed, labeled, and packaged" |
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1976
"equal to" law
covers processors |
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municipal: local/county
state: can only sell meat in that state
federal: in all of U.S.
*coordinated by the FSIS branch of the USDA* |
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inspector in charge
veterinarian |
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inspection plant personnel
laypersons |
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detection/destruction of diseased/contaminated meat
assurance of clean/sanitary handling/prep
minimization of microbial contamination of meat
prevention of adulteration/addition of harmful chem/drug residue
prevention of false labeling(can't label w/o inspector)
application of inspection insignia |
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the addition of harmful substances or products considered improper in certain specified quantities |
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buildings
cleaning/sanitation
pest control
equipment |
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mainly done by vet
live animals: condition/handling practices
lymph nodes of head, lungs, liver
tongue, heart, spleen, kidney
carcass
employees |
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stamp the carcass
stamp must say U.S. inspected/passed and plant # |
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get blue tag
do further carcass testing |
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tell USDA inspectors how to do certain processes |
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get when you break the rules |
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Hazard Analysis of Critical Control Points
systematic approach to the ID, eval., and control of food safety hazards
started in 1960s by Pilsbury for NASA
foundation of any plant's food safety system
made mandatory in 1998 |
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Definition
conduct a hazard analysis
list steps in the process where hazard occurs
describe preventative measures
assess the severity of the hazard and its frequency |
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ID critical control points
CCPS are located at any step at which control can be applied and is essential to eliminate/reduce a food safety hazard |
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specify critical limits
used to distinguish between safe/unsafe
ex: time, temp, observation, moisture level, pH, chlorine level, salt concentration, viscosity, microbes |
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establish monitoring procedures
planned
needs to be "real time" and accurate |
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establish corrective action
to correct/eliminate cause
provide a record of deviations/corrective action
ID the product affected and its fate |
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establish verification procedure
to verify that the HACCP plan is valid
to verify that the HACCP system works |
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salmonella, campylobacter |
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e. coli O157:H7, salmonella |
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Ready to eat(RTE) pathogens |
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Definition
salmonella, e. coli, listeria(main) |
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Term
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Definition
organism resides in fecal, dirt, gut, etc.
called the hamburger disease b/c on surface of meat but all over hamburger since grinded up
origin: GI tract
susceptible groups: immunocompromised, young, old, pregnant, HIV, etc.
symptoms: bloody diarrhea, cramps, HUS
length of illness: usually 2-3 weeks to develop |
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process, practice, or chemical applied to the meat/processing environment in order to reduce levels of foodborne pathogens(slow/stop/remove) |
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using more than one type of intervention |
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bleed out then run through "car wash" |
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#1 thing to make sure of to prevent pathogens |
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180°F steam used to follow patern(where they open hide) |
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pre-evisceration cabinet wash
like hide wash
lactic(main), acetic, peracetic acid
penetrates cell wall→change pH→kill bacteria |
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Definition
hot water carcass was/hot water pasteurization system
get off bone dust, etc. |
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if gut, etc. gets busted open |
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trained employees- very important- skinning line, rotating/sterilizing, washing frequently, cross contamination awareness
traffic patterns
air flow- people think e. coli travels thru air |
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zero tolerance audits: CCPs
verifEYE- emerge- detects all plant derived materials
carcass mapping/OPEX
generic e. coli testing/carcass monitoring- mandatory per 300 head
trim testing- combo bins- trim off contaminants |
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Definition
must reach below 45°F in 24 hrs |
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Prefabrication Carcass Organic Acid Rinse |
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Definition
carcasses subjected to lactic acid(2.5%) immediately prior to fabrication
carcass surface bacteria counts were determined via the 3-site sponging method(FSIS) immediately before and after treatment |
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Fabrication belt organic acid application |
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Definition
continuous lactic acid(2.5%) application to fabrication belts
suprimals(top sirloin butts), beef trimmings, and belt surfaces sampled to determine microbe quality |
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Definition
trim/subprimal intervention cabinets- peroxyacetic acid
in bag technologies- antibacterial in vacuum sealed bags
vaccinations- bioniche, epitopix
barriers- # of doses, lack of data |
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Definition
studies indicate that over 90% of animals less likely to be colonized after 3 injections
approved in Canada but not U.S. |
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new SRP technology for vaccines
conditional approved in U.S. |
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