Food safety

Food Safety and HACCP Basics for Food Product Operations

Food safety systems identify hazards, define controls, monitor production, correct problems, verify records, and protect consumers throughout the product flow.

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HACCP principles in plain language

PrinciplePractical Meaning
Conduct hazard analysisIdentify biological, chemical, and physical hazards that can occur in ingredients, processing, packaging, storage, or distribution.
Identify critical control pointsFind steps where control is essential to prevent, eliminate, or reduce hazards.
Set critical limitsDefine measurable limits such as time, temperature, pH, water activity, or other product-specific controls.
Monitor controlsRecord whether the process stays within limits.
Correct problemsDefine actions when monitoring shows a control was missed or out of range.
Verify systemConfirm records, equipment, procedures, and controls are working.
Keep recordsMaintain documentation that shows what happened and how decisions were made.

Preventive controls that food teams review

Process controls

Time, temperature, formulation, pH, water activity, cooking, cooling, or other process steps.

Allergen controls

Ingredient storage, scheduling, labeling, sanitation, line clearance, and rework handling.

Sanitation controls

Cleaning procedures, environmental controls, verification, and records.

Supply-chain controls

Supplier approval, ingredient documentation, certificates, testing, and receiving checks.

Recall plan

Lot tracking, contact lists, decision authority, mock recalls, and communication steps.

Food safety FAQ

Is HACCP the same as a food safety plan?

HACCP is a hazard-control system built around seven principles. FSMA preventive controls can require broader written food safety plans depending on the facility and product.

What is a process flow diagram?

A process flow diagram maps each step from receiving through distribution so hazards and controls can be reviewed at the right points.

Why are records important?

Records show whether controls were monitored, whether corrective actions occurred, and whether product can be released with confidence.

HACCP example: refrigerated prepared food

A refrigerated prepared food can involve ingredient receiving, cold storage, preparation, cooking, cooling, filling, labeling, and refrigerated distribution. Each step can introduce different hazards. The value of HACCP is that the team maps hazards, controls, monitoring, corrective actions, verification, and records.

StepPossible HazardPractical Control
Cold receivingTemperature abuse before arrivalTemperature check, supplier approval, rejection criteria.
CookingSurvival of pathogensValidated time and temperature control.
CoolingGrowth during slow coolingCooling log and defined time limits.
LabelingUndeclared allergenLabel verification and line clearance.
DistributionTemperature abuse during transportCarrier requirements and temperature records.

Food safety records that create accountability

Receiving logs

Show ingredient condition, lot information, supplier, and storage decisions.

Sanitation records

Show cleaning tasks, chemicals, frequency, responsible person, and verification.

Monitoring logs

Show critical or preventive controls stayed within defined limits.

Corrective action records

Show what happened when a limit was missed and how affected product was handled.

Recall trace records

Show how ingredients, packaging, production lots, and shipments connect.