by Fisherman » Tue Mar 27, 2007 7:55 pm
Hi,
I am an environmental health officer specialising in food safety so felt I should respond.
Much of what we ask for is good practice not a legal requirement but we are obliged by a statutory code of practice to separate the two, however, sometimes in conversations, this is not easy. There should be a clear separation in anything you receive in writing.
Anyone supplying food as part of a business must have procedures (which must be documented) in place to demonstrate that all food supplied has been properly handled and is safe to eat - the term HACCP may be familiar to some of you. Checking cooking temperatures is one of these procedures. A blue steak does not present a problem, neither does a rare whole muscle joint. Any possible contamination would be on the outside of the meat and provided the outside surface has been raised to a high enough temperature the meat is safe. Probing is unnecessary.
The situation is different with, for example, a boned and rolled joint where contamination may have been introduced into the middle of the joint. It is essential in this case to ensure that the centre of the joint reaches 75 degrees.
Enough preaching. I would like to say how much I have enjoyed the forums over the past couple of months. It's great to see there are so many people as interested in food as me. Successfull experiments to date with bacon, sausages, salami, pork pies and ham.
Ian