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December, 2003 - Eating Before It Gets Cold
Winston-Salem company has found its business niche
with new food-management technology.
An article from The
Winston-Salem Journal
By Howard Edwards
Cooking up a storm is a tricky business in the
food-service industry, where time and temperature can make the
difference between a happy eating experience and an unpleasant
illness.
But new technology is lending a hand in the fight
against food-borne diseases.
In such large organizations as hospitals, prisons
and education establishments that regularly have to prepare large
quantities of food, strict rules govern the handling, cooking,
chilling and reheating of food. These regulations, known as Hazard
Analysis Critical Control Points, help reduce the chance of such
bacteria and viruses as Salmonellosis, Staphylococcal and E. coli
ruining your meal and your health.
A Winston-Salem company, Burlodge USA, is at
the forefront in food service with food-management technology
that prepares, delivers and monitors the food from the time it
is cooked to when it reaches its recipient.
"Food quality and its risk management have
improved significantly over the years," said Peter Scotland,
a culinary consultant for Burlodge USA. Burlodge provides chilling
and rethermalization (reheating) units to about 92 institutions
throughout the United States, ranging from hospitals to prisons.
"It's all about time and temperature,"
Scotland said.
"There is a danger zone between 41 and 140
degrees where bacteria can flourish. We provide chilling and tray-delivery
carts which minimize this risk by controlling the temperature
of food and monitoring it to ensure it spends as little time as
possible in the danger zone," Scotland said.
In the health-care industry, the company's primary
target in the United States, food typically can be prepared on
or off-site.
Burlodge's blast chillers can quickly chill the
food to below 41 degrees, and it can be stored or put into tray-delivery
carts where it is kept chilled until time for use. According to
Scotland, the food can then be reheated to regulation temperatures,
which must be above 165 degrees in preparation for delivery.
A temperature of 165 degrees is known as the
kill temperature for bacteria and is the minimum temperature setting
required when reheating food.
Scotland says that once this has been done, the
food must be served at a temperature above 140 degrees but usually
below 165 degrees, which he said would be a little too hot for
most people's tastes.
The company provides food-safety monitoring software
which allows clients to check on and control food delivery, including
monitoring all delivery carts, from the comfort of their own office.
"The bottom line with the regulations is
food safety and prevention of food-borne illness," said Robert
Whitwam, the environmental-health supervisor for the Forsyth County
Health Department's Division of Environmental Health.
Between 1998 and 2002, there were 631 cases of
illness in Forsyth County likely to have stemmed from food-borne
diseases or contamination, the chief culprit being Salmonellosis
(Salmonella) with 254 reported cases, according to the Health
Surveillance Unit of the Forsyth County Department of Public Health.
Whitwam also said that there are likely to be
more cases of gastroenteritis in the community that are not reported
or confirmed.
People in such large organizations as hospitals
and nursing homes are more susceptible to these diseases because
their immune systems are weakened. According to Whitwam, "Anytime
you start preparing large volumes and quantities of food, there's
more room for problems. That's why we start relying on technology
like the Cook and Chill system, which really focuses on the time/temperature
relationship in food. If that food is off-temperature, that is
between 41 and 140 degrees, for an extended period of time, any
bacteria there will start to grow.
"From a time-and-temperature perspective,
this sort of system will allow management (personnel) to monitor
each patient's food from the time it is plated, which is good,
but," he added, "the system has to work properly."
"What we're concerned with is the control
of that food product through the entire range of pre-paration,
storage plating rethermalization and delivery to the floor,"
said Whitwam, whose department makes unannounced inspections of
all food-service organizations. "Cook and Chill has its merits,
especially in a large facility where you're handling many meals
and they are going to several different locations."
Burlodge recently won a contract to provide 150
customized rethermalization units to the Mar-icopa County Correctional
Facility in Arizona. The company has also turned its attention
to the Carolinas and is pursuing more contracts in North Carolina
and the Triad.
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