Oklahoma Administrative Code
Title 310 - Oklahoma State Department of Health
Chapter 260 - Good Manufacturing Practice Regulations
Subchapter 3 - Manufacturing, Processing, Packing or Holding Human Food
Section 310:260-3-6 - Processes and controls
Universal Citation: OK Admin Code 310:260-3-6
Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
(a) General.
(1) All operations in
the manufacturing, processing, packing, and holding of food (including
operations directed to receiving, inspecting, transporting, and segregating)
must be conducted in accordance with adequate sanitation principles.
(2) Appropriate quality control operations
must be employed to ensure that food is suitable for human consumption and that
food-packaging materials are safe and suitable.
(3) Overall sanitation of the plant must be
under the supervision of one or more competent individuals assigned
responsibility for this function.
(4) Adequate precautions must be taken to
ensure that production procedures do not contribute to allergen cross-contact
and to contamination from any source.
(5) Chemical, microbial, or
extraneous-material testing procedures must be used where necessary to identify
sanitation failures or possible allergen cross-contact and food contamination.
(6) All food that has become
contaminated to the extent that it is adulterated must be rejected, or if
appropriate, treated or processed to eliminate the contamination.
(b) Raw materials and other ingredients.
(1) Raw materials and
other ingredients shall be inspected and segregated or otherwise handled as
necessary to ascertain that they are clean and suitable for processing into
food and shall be stored under conditions that will protect against allergen
cross-contact and against contamination and minimize deterioration. Raw
materials shall be washed or cleaned as necessary to remove soil or other
contamination. Water used for washing, rinsing, or conveying food shall be safe
and of adequate sanitary quality. Water may be reused for washing, rinsing, or
conveying food if it does not cause allergen cross-contact or increases the
level of contamination of the food. Containers and carriers of raw materials
should be inspected on receipt to ensure that their condition has not
contributed to the contamination or deterioration of food.
(2) Raw materials and other ingredients shall
either not contain levels of microorganisms that may render the food injurious
to the health of in humans, or they shall be pasteurized or otherwise be
treated during manufacturing operations so that they no longer contain levels
that would cause the product to be adulterated.
(3) Raw materials and other ingredients
susceptible to contamination with aflatoxin or other natural toxins shall
comply with current FDA regulations for poisonous or deleterious substances
before these materials or ingredients are incorporated into finished food.
(4) Raw materials, other
ingredients, and rework susceptible to contamination with pests, undesirable
microorganisms, or extraneous material shall comply with applicable FDA
regulations for natural or unavoidable defects if a manufacturer wishes to use
the materials in manufacturing food.
(5) Raw materials, other ingredients, and
rework shall be held in bulk, or in containers designed and constructed so as
to protect against allergen cross-contact and against contamination and shall
be held at such temperature and relative humidity and in such a manner as to
prevent the food from becoming adulterated. Material scheduled for rework shall
be identified as such and separated from other foods.
(6) Frozen raw materials and other
ingredients shall be kept frozen. If thawing is required prior to use, it shall
be done in a manner that prevents the raw materials and other ingredients from
becoming adulterated.
(7) Liquid or
dry raw materials and other ingredients received and stored in bulk form shall
be held in a manner that protects against allergen cross-contact and against
contamination.
(8) Raw materials
and other ingredients that are food allergens, and rework that contains food
allergens, must be identified and held in a manner that prevents allergen
cross-contact.
(c) Manufacturing operations.
(1)
Equipment and utensils and finished food containers shall be maintained in an
adequate condition through appropriate cleaning and sanitizing, as necessary.
Insofar as necessary, equipment shall be taken apart for thorough
cleaning.
(2) All food
manufacturing, including packaging and storage, shall be conducted under such
conditions and controls as are necessary to minimize the potential for the
growth of microorganisms and allergen cross-contact.
(3) Food that can support the rapid growth of
undesirable microorganisms shall be held at temperatures that will prevent the
food from becoming adulteratedduring manufacturing, processing, packing, and
holding.
(4) Measures such as
sterilizing, irradiating, pasteurizing, freezing, refrigerating, controlling pH
or controlling aw that are taken to destroy or prevent the growth of
undesirable microorganismsshall be adequate under the conditions of
manufacture, handling, and distribution to prevent food from being
adulterated.
(5) Work-in-process
and rework shall be handled in a manner that protects against allergen
cross-contact, contamination, and growth of undesirable
microorganisms.
(6) Effective
measures shall be taken to protect finished food from allergen cross-contact
and from contamination by raw materials, other ingredients, or refuse. When raw
materials, other ingredients, or refuse are unprotected, they shall not be
handled simultaneously in a receiving, loading, or shipping area if that
handling could result in allergen cross-contact or contaminated food. Food
transported by conveyor shall be protected against allergen cross-contact and
against contamination as necessary.
(7) Equipment, containers, and utensils used
to convey, hold, or store raw materials and other ingredients, work-in-process,
rework or other food shall be constructed, handled, and maintained during
manufacturing processing, packing, and holding in a manner that protects
against allergen cross-contact and against contamination.
(8) Adequate measures shall be taken to
protect against the inclusion of metal or other extraneous material in
food.
(9) Food, raw materials, and
other ingredients that are adulterated:
(A)
Shall be disposed in a manner that protects against the contamination of other
food; or
(B) If the adulterated
food is capable of being reconditioned, it shall be:
(i) Reconditioned (if appropriate) using a
method that has been proven to be effective; or
(ii) Reconditioned (if appropriate) and
reexamined and subsequently found not to be adulterated before being
incorporated into other food.
(10) Steps such as washing, peeling,
trimming, cutting, sorting and inspecting, mashing, dewatering, cooling,
shredding, extruding, drying, whipping, defatting, and forming shall be
performed so as to protect food against allergen cross-contact and against
contamination.
(11) Heat blanching,
when required in the preparation of foodcapable of supporting microbial growth,
should be effected by heating the food to the required temperature, holding it
at this temperature for the required time, and then either rapidly cooling the
food or passing it to subsequent manufacturing without delay. Growth and
contamination by thermophilic microorganisms in blanchers should be minimized
by the use of adequate operating temperatures and by periodic cleaningand
sanitizing as necessary.
(12)
Batters, breading, sauces, gravies, dressings, dipping solutions, and other
similar preparations that are held and used repeatedly over time shall be
treated or maintained in such a manner that they are protected against allergen
cross-contact and against contamination, and minimizing the potential for the
growth of undesirable microorganisms.
(13) Filling, assembling, packaging, and
other operations shall be performed in such a way that the food is protected
against allergen cross-contact, contamination, and growth of undesirable
microorganisms.
(14) Food such as,
but not limited to, dry mixes, nuts, immediate moisture food, and dehydrated
food, that relies on the control of aw for preventing
the growth of undesirable microorganisms shall be processed to and maintained
at a safe moisture level.
(15) Food
such as, but not limited to, acid and acidified food, that relies principally
on the control of pH for preventing the growth of undesirable microorganisms
shall be monitored and maintained at a pH of 4.6 or below.
(16) When ice is used in contact with food,
it shall be made from water that is safe and of adequate sanitary quality in
accordance with
310:260-3-4(a),
and shall be used only if it has been manufactured in accordance with current
good manufacturing practice as outlined in these regulations.
(17) Food-manufacturing areas and equipment
used for manufacturing human food shall not be used to manufacture nonhuman
food grade animal feed or inedible products, unless there is no reasonable
possibility for the contamination of the human food.
(18) Food manufacturing shall not be
performed in places of human residence nor shall manufacturing areas open
directly into rooms occupied as residence or sleeping quarters.
(19) Meaningful coding of products sold or
otherwise distributed from a manufacturing, processing, packing, or repacking
activity should be utilized to enable positive lot identification to
facilitate, where necessary, the segregation of specific food lots that may
have become contaminated or otherwise unfit for their intended use. Records
should be retained for a period of time that exceeds the shelf life of the
product, except that they need not be retained more than two (2)
years.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Oklahoma may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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