30
Acrylamide Regulations come into force requiring mitigation of acrylamide: 18 April 2018

Presentation title Presentation subtitle - … is acrylamide? •Chemical formed during cooking due to chemical reaction of amino acids and sugar called the Maillard reaction •Deemed

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Acrylamide

Regulations come into force requiring mitigation of acrylamide:

18 April 2018

What is acrylamide?

• Chemical formed during cooking due to chemical reaction of amino acids and sugar called the Maillard reaction

• Deemed to be a human carcinogen by European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)

• Cannot eliminate acrylamide in food, so need to reduce it as much as possible.

The Regulations

• Acrylamide = chemical hazard in HACCP-based Food Safety Management Systems

• Enforcement will be under Article 5 of 852/2004• Regulations require all businesses to put into place

measures to reduce acrylamide to levels as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA)

• Benchmark values are guides, not maximum admissible concentrations

• Small businesses not expected to do chemical tests –measures to be proportionate

• Hospitality Industry Guide being produced

Indicative Values – not MACs

Hospitality Industry Consultation

• Wide variety of restaurants and other outlets

• Many menu items and variations

• £200 per acrylamide test

• Burden of testing - unacceptable

• Incorporation of acrylamide controls into HACCP

• Cost estimate: max £100 per business

Acrylamide and Foods in Catering Article 1(2)

• Potato products – chips, other deep fried potato products, home made crisps.

• Crisps and snacks made from potato or potato dough

• Bread

• Breakfast cereals

• “Fine Bakery Wares” –biscuits, scones, crumpets

• Coffee

• Baby foods

Lack of clarity - not specifically mentioned:

• Pizza

• Doughnuts, churros – may come under “Fine Bakery Wares”

• Pasties and pies

• Baked pasta dishes

• Roast potatoes (although may be classed as oven fried potatoes)

• Toast (but bread is)

• Breaded foods (but bread is)

BHA Catering Guide to Acrylamide

• Practical guide• Simple to understand and use• Toolkit• Guide to compliance• Best Practice • Working with other stakeholders• Amalgamation of good materials from many sources:

– Potato Processing Association– European colleagues– Hospitality Europe– Consumer research – France and UK

Less onerous requirements for small businesses

• Article 2.2 applies to small businesses

• Article 2.3: businesses that -– operate in facilities under direct control and that

are operating under one trademark or commercial license, as a part of, or franchise of, a larger, interconnected operation and under the instructions of the food business operator that centrally supplies the foodstuffs.”

• All businesses must put into place mitigation measures

Considerations for control at catering steps

Purchase

• Variety and type of potato – pick lower sugar content

• Reduced starch

• Use a cooking oil which allows to fry quicker and/or at lower temperatures;

Storage

• Temperatures matter to potatoes

• Sugar increases with lower temperatures

• Keep above 6°C (out of the fridge)

• Don’t bruise potatoes – it increases the starch

Preparation

• Washing, soaking

• Par-boiling (can reduce acrylamide by 50%),

• Reduce surface area to reduce acrylamide - less on roast potatoes than on thin cut chips

Cooking – potato products

• Cooking – 160-175°C in the fryer • Twice cooked, 160°C for first cook• Oven - 190-220°C• Cook French fries to gold• Avoid frying till brown/dark• Maintain good frying oil quality• Skim frequently to remove bits • Regularly refresh the deep-frying oil• Follow manufacturers’ instructions• Use manufacturers’ original printed cooking chart to

cross check

Larger organisations

Article 2(3) applies

• Work to Standard Operating Procedures

• Computerised fryers for time / temperature when equipment is replaced

• Sampling plan at head office to verify mitigation

• Specify to suppliers that coffee must be supplied below bench mark

Baking

• Bake bread to a light colour

• Bake biscuits to light colour

• When reasonably possible, consider using lower oven temperature with longer cooking time

• Follow manufacturer’s instructions if baking par-baked bread products

Toast

• Don’t over-toast

• Avoid dark brown

• Be careful with brown bread

Documentation, Monitoring and Records

• Incorporate into FSMS• “Go for gold”• Small businesses - no testing – use correlation

from manufacturers’ original colour chart where possible

• Incorporate checks into normal routine for cooking and service

• Records to show checks done from time to time• Training to be incorporated into normal food safety

training

Example of simple record

What’s next?

• Finalising guide with FSA, FSS and other stakeholders

• Primary Authority Assured Advice

• FSA letter for enforcement officers in progress

• FBOs to embed into FSMS

What should businesses do to show compliance?

• Show awareness

• Embed in FSMS

• Do simple checks – eg colour checks

• Back up checks with some HO testing if a larger company