Mar 3, 2014

ஆறாம் திணை

'கலர்கலராகக் கனவுகள் மட்டும் இருந்தால் பத்தாது; உணவும் இருக்க வேண்டும்’ என்கிறது உணவு அறிவியல். சில மணங்களை மனம் ரசிப்பதற்கு, மூளைக்குச் சில வண்ணங்கள் தேவைப்படு கின்றனவாம். ஆதலால், உணவில் வண்ணம் தீட்டும் வணிகம், ஒரு வருடத்துக்குக் கிட்டத்தட்ட 2,200 மில்லியன் டாலருக்கு நடக்கிறது! 
ஹோட்டலில் செக்கச்செவேலென இருக்கும் தந்தூரி சிக்கனையும் சில்லி சிக்கனையும் சாப்பிட்டுவிட்டு கையை, சமையல் பாத்திரம் கழுவுவதுபோல் எலுமிச்சைச் சாறு, சோப்புத் தண்ணீர் எல்லாம் விட்டுக் கழுவிய பின்னரும் கையில் இளஞ்சிவப்பாக ஒட்டியிருப்பது, கோழியில் இருந்தோ, குழம்பில் போட்ட மிளகாய் வற்றலில் இருந்தோ வந்தது கிடையாது. உங்கள் கண்களைக் கவர அதில் தூவிய 'ரெட் டை 40’ எனும் 'ஆசோ டை’யின் எச்சமாக இருக்கலாம். 
பெட்ரோலில் இருந்து பிரித்து எடுக்கப்படும் இந்த ரசாயன நிறமி வகைகள்தாம் பஞ்சு மிட்டாய், கேசரி, தந்தூரி சிக்கன்களிலும் பெருவாரியாகச் சேர்க்கப்படுகின்றன. சிக்கனும், பஞ்சுமிட்டாயும், கேசரியும் ரத்தச் சிவப்பாக இருந்தால்தான் பிடிக்கும் என்றால், ஒருவேளை ரத்தம் வற்றும் புற்றுநோயும் கூடவே வரலாம் என்கிறது இன்றைய ஆய்வுகள். பல நாடுகள் அந்த நிறமிகளைத் தடையும் செய்திருக்கின்றன. இப்படிச் செயற்கையாக இல்லாமல், எத்தனை நிறங்கள் இயற்கை உணவில் இருக்கின்றன என உற்றுப்பார்த்தால் ஆச்சரியம்! 
தாவரம் தன் வளர்சிதை மாற்றத்தில் சேமித்துவைக்கும் பொருள்தாம் இந்தத் தாவர நிறமிகள். 'பாலிபீனால்கள் குழுமம்’ என்று தாவரவியலாளரால் அழைக்கப்படும் சத்துகளில்தான், இந்த நிறமிகளைத் தரும் சத்துகள் அனைத்தும் அடங்கும். இவை, தாவரம் தன்னை அல்ட்ரா வயலெட் கதிர்களில் இருந்தும், அழிச்சாட்டியம் செய்யும் சில கிருமிகளில் இருந்தும் பாதுகாத்துக்கொள்ள உருவாக்கிக்கொண்டவை. மனிதன் அதனைச் சாப்பிடும்போது, அதையும் தாண்டி, சர்க்கரை, ரத்தக் கொதிப்பு, புற்றுநோய், மாரடைப்பு முதலான தொற்றா நோய்கள் மற்றும் தொற்று நோய்கள் தாக்காதபடி உடலுக்கு நோய் எதிர்ப்பாற்றல் தருவதில் பெரும் பயன் தருகிறது! 


'ஓ... அப்போ இந்த பாலிபீனால் மாத்திரை எங்கே கிடைக்கும்?’ என்று உடனே இணையத்தில் தேட வேண்டாம். 
பால் சேர்க்காத ஒரு கப் தேநீரில் (100-150 மி.கி.) எளிதில் கிடைக்கும். க்ரீன் டீயில் இந்தச் சத்து கூடுதல். 100 கிராம் கறுப்புப் பன்னீர் திராட்சையோ, கருநீல நாவல் பழமோ, சிவந்த ஆப்பிளோ, பப்பாளியோ, மாதுளையோ, உங்களுக்கு (200-300 மி.கி.) பாலிபீனாலைத் தரக்கூடும். இந்தப் பழங்கள் மிகவும் கனிவதற்கு முன்பு, கொஞ்சம் இளங்காயாக இருந்தால் பீனாலிக் அமிலங்கள் சற்று அதிக அளவில் கிடைக்கும். அதிகம் பழுத்திடாத இளங்கொய்யாவை சர்க்கரை நோயாளிகளுக்குப் பரிந்துரைப்பதும், 'வாழை இளம் பிஞ்சொழிய கனியருந்தல் செய்யோம்!’ என, சித்த மருத்துவ நோயணுகா விதி பாடியதும் இதனால்தான். 
அதே சமயம் ஆன்தோசயனின் எனும் நிறமிச் சத்துகளோ, நன்கு பழுக்கும்போது பழத்தோலில் உருவாகிறது. ஆதலால் மாதுளை, பப்பாளி, தக்காளி, மாம்பழம் ஆகியவற்றை நன்கு கனிந்த பின்னர் சாப்பிடுவது சிறந்தது. வெறும் வயிற்றில் வேறு உணவு இல்லாத வேளையில் பழங்கள் உள்ளே சென்றால்தான் மருத்துவப் பயன்தரும் அதன் நிறமிச்சத்துகள் முழுமையாக உட்கிரகிக்கப்படும். டெசர்ட் என்ற பெயரில் பழத்தை கடைசி பெஞ்சில் உட்காரவைப்பது முட்டாள்தனம்! 
அதே சமயம் இந்த பாலினால்களை சமைப்பதில், சேமிப்பதில் கவனம் இல்லாவிட்டால் அதன் பயனை இழக்கக்கூடும். சிறிய வெங்காயம், தக்காளி, முள்ளங்கி, ஆந்திரா ஸ்பெஷல் கோங்குரா எனும் புளிச்சகீரை ஆகிய காய்கறிகளிலும், சதகுப்பை முதலான பல மூலிகைகளிலும் உள்ள 'குயிர்செட்டின்’ எனும் சத்துதான், நம் ரத்த நாளத்தில் கொழுப்புப் படியாமல் இருக்க உதவும் முக்கியமான பாலிபீனால் சத்து. ஆனால், வெங்காயத்தையும் தக்காளியையும் சமைக்காமல் சாலட் ஆக சாப்பிடும்போதுதான் முழுப் பயன் கிடைக்கும். வெங்காயத்தை வேக வைக்கும்போது 80 சதவிகிதமும், வறுக்கும்போது 30 சதவிகிதமும் பாலிபீனால்கள் காணாமல்போகும். கூடவே இந்த பாலிபீனால்கள் உடலில் உட்கிரகிக்கப்பட, நம் சிறுகுடல், பெருங்குடல் பகுதியில் லோக்டோபேசிலஸ் முதலான புரோபயாடிக்ஸ் இருப்பது நல்லதாம். அது இயல்பாகக் கிடைப்பது மோரில் மட்டுமே. ஆக, சின்ன வெங்காயத்தின் பயன் முழுமையாக வேண்டுமானால், வெங்காயத் தயிர் பச்சடியோ, வெங்காயம் தொட்டுக்கொண்டு மோர் சோறாகவோ, மோர் சேர்த்த கம்பங்கூழாகவோ சாப்பிடுவது சாலச் சிறந்தது. 
வெங்காய பக்கோடா, சுவை தரலாம்; ஆனால் சுகம் தராது. அதேபோல் வெங்காயத்தின் வெளி வட்டத்தில்தான் அந்தச் சத்து அதிகம். சுத்தம் பார்க்கிறேன் பேர்வழி என வெளிப்பக்கம் பூராவும் உரித்து உரித்து, உள்ளே உள்ள வெள்ளை வெங்காயத்தை மட்டும் சாப்பிடுவது புத்திசாலித்தனம் அல்ல. 
இப்படி இயற்கையாக நிறமும் கொடுத்து, உடலுக்கு உரமும் தரும் பொருள்கள் ஏராளமாக இருக்கும்போது, 'முந்தானைப் பக்கம் சிவப்பு கலர் பார்டரும், கொசுவத்தில் லைட் ஷேடும் வர்ற மாதிரி கொடுங்க’ என்று கேட்பதுபோல, நாம் சாப்பிடும் கேக்கில் மூணு அடுக்கு வண்ணம், பிஸ்கட் பார்டர் ஒரு வண்ணம், உள்ளே க்ரீம் இரண்டு வண்ணம், குளிர்பானத்தில் புது வண்ணம் எனச் சாப்பிடுவது, கொஞ்சமாக பெட்ரோலும் தாரும் குடிப்பதற்குச் சமம்.

Food safety & Hygiene No Room For Complacency

The advent of Food Safety & Standards Act (FSSA) has brought a paradigm shift in the way Food Business Operators (FBOs) perceive and handle matters related to safety and hygiene standards at their units. The onus is also upon the facility planners and designers to help the industry with kitchen designs which are in sync with the laid down standards. Hospitality Biz tries to understand how hospitality consultants and vendors are gearing up to take the FSSA bull by the horns
food_safety_and_hygiene_1.jpg
While the news of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) postponing the deadline yet again for conversion, renewal of existing registrations for FBO’s under the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Regulations 2011 has been welcomed by the hospitality industry in one voice; it doesn’t give a permanent consolation to the industry.  Of course, the fourth extension held on February 4, 2014 might be a shrewd move by political masters for another six months, for whom this is the time to appease the vote banks. But the one thing that’s sure is the new regulations that are framed after prolonged consultations are here to stay and cannot be buckled for long.

The hotel and restaurant industry is by and large in favour of the regulation, except for few flaws in the “technical and regulatory” aspects of it.  They wanted “calibrated” and “consultative” approach before it being enforced upon the industry. Yes, of course, in a country where major chunk, almost 70 per cent, of food service business is in the unorganised sector, any talk of food safety and hygiene standards would be an impractical proposition without addressing the ground realities.  However, the marathon consultations and workshops organised over the last two years both by the authority as well as the industry bodies across the country have created certain level of awareness about the impending regulatory framework  in the market.

food_safety_and_hygiene_2.jpgThe FSSA lays down stringent procedures starting from designing the commercial kitchens, layout, usage of equipments, procurements of ingredients, handling and storage, hygiene of both the facility as well as handlers, preparation, display to others.  The FBOs have to keep records of everything at every level of procurement till usage.  The units also have to keep the licencing authority updated on any change in the lay out, expansion, change in product category for which licence has been obtained.

The high level of safety and hygiene outlined in the FSSA would necessitate very high levels of professionalism while delivering food service. The professional consultants, hotel and restaurant designers, facility planners, equipment manufacturers and suppliers, food importers, vendors all have to re-adjust their role in the industry so that their clients and customers are not inconvenienced unnecessarily by the regulators.

Sense of caution
Professional consultants find the new regulatory regime as an opportunity to improve the food service delivery system in the country.  The standards although difficult to implement in the Indian context due to various bottlenecks related to infrastructure, the general feeling is that it is time we improved our food safety and hygiene standards to the international standards.  The hospitality consultants feel that hotel and restaurant owners need to focus on safety aspects from the concept stage of their units to create a safe and hygienic environment. 

anil_bhandari_new.jpg“Precautions that need to be taken to ensure conformity with food safety norms have to be taken from the conceptual stage itself. The concept includes identification of the type of cuisine to be served; creation of a menu listing the number of items to be prepared; and categorisation of the equipment required to prepare the type of cuisine identified,” informs Anil Bhandari, Chairman, abSmart Concepts. A time-and-motion study is necessary before considering the design of the kitchen and secondary spaces as it will help in making decisions related to the site plan, floor plan, equipment layout, plumbing, ventilation, lighting and materials to be used. In accordance with the Hazard analysis and critical control points (HACCP) guidelines, importance is being given to ergonomically-designed installations such as plumbing, drainage, lighting, air-conditioning, exhaust, fire safety and accident-proof systems, suggests Bhandari.

m_ramvittal_rao.jpgAccording to M Ramvittal Rao, Director, Vittal Concept Design, any food and beverage production space must primarily meet three kinds of safety aspects - food safety, employee safety and fire safety. “The equipment selected must be provided with certifications which have an international stamp such as NSF, CE, UL, TUV, EnergyStar and others.  These certifications provide for all requirements for a safe working kitchen environment.  Additionally, wall surfaces need to receive matt finish vitrified tiles with minimal joints or synthetic hard plastic wall panels, floors should be laid with ten millimeter thick vitrified composite tiles and still better resin bonded quartz sheets which will last 15 years plus.  The false ceilings in all kitchen areas should be stainless steel,” he informs.

Highlights of the general Sanitary and hygienic requirements applicable for FBOs are as under

Layout And Design Of Food Establishment Premises
  1. As far as possible, the layout of the food establishment shall be such that food preparation / manufacturing processes are not amenable to cross-contamination from other pre and post manufacturing operations like goods receiving, pre-processing (viz. packaging, washing / portioning of ready-to-eat food, etc).
  2. Floors, ceilings and walls must be maintained  in a sound condition to minimize the accumulation of dirt, condensation and growth of undesirable moulds. They should be made of impervious material and should be smooth and easy to clean with no flaking paint or plaster.
  3. The floor of food processing / food service area shall have adequate and proper drainage and shall be easy to clean and where necessary, disinfect. Floors shall be sloped appropriately to facilitate drainage and the drainage shall flow in a direction opposite to the direction of food preparation / manufacturing process flow.
  4. Adequate control measures should be in place to prevent insects and rodents from entering the processing area from drains.
  5. No person shall manufacture, store or expose for sale or permit the sale of any article of food in any premises not effectively separated to the satisfaction of the licensing authority from any privy, urinal, sullage, drain or place of storage of foul and waste matter.
Equipment & Containers
  1. Equipment and containers that come in contact with food and used for food handling, storage, preparation, processing, packaging and serving shall be made of corrosion free materials which do not impart any toxicity to the food material and should be easy to clean and /or disinfect (other than disposable single use types).
  2. Equipment shall be so located, designed and fabricated that it permits necessary maintenance and cleaning functions as per its intended use and facilitates good hygiene practices inside the premise including monitoring and audit.
  3. Appropriate facilities for the cleaning and disinfecting of equipments and instruments and wherever possible cleaning in place (CIP) system shall be adopted.

pankaj_giroti.jpgStrong compliance to food safety and hygiene standards  would become  a unique selling proposition for hotels and restaurants going forward and would enable them to derive higher return on investments, feels Pankaj Giroti, Chief Advisory Mentor, TallOak Hospitality. “We strongly recommend to the hospitality entrepreneurs to create right facilities. The idea is to create hygienic facilities, ease of working and comforting atmosphere, in addition to something that pleases one and all. Moreover, the aim is always to reduce the cost of operation and increase efficiency manifolds. As the old saying goes Back of the house supplements the Front of the House,” he states.  Complying with the HACCP and Food Safety regulations, one needs to conduct a hazard analysis , identify critical control points, establish critical limits, establish critical control monitoring requirements, establish corrective actions, establish record keeping systems and establish verification procedures.

neel_kamal_chauhan.jpgKitchen designers strictly follow HACCP principals and now FSSAI, informs Neel Kamal Chauhan of HPG Consulting.  Explaining the various priorities when comes to designing a kitchen, Neel said, “Avoiding cross flows, adequate refrigeration, process monitoring, personal hygiene of the staff, cross contamination, kitchen waste management are of vital importance in a kitchen design. “Refrigeration is an integral part of any kitchen design and is designed keeping in mind the incoming and outgoing flow of perishables. Integration of refrigeration with BMS (building management system) has become vital element in designs.  Staff accesses through hygiene control systems , air purification, sterilization of processing equipment are also integral part of any kitchen design,” Neel added.

pradeep_mathur.jpgEnumerating the design priorities, Pradeep Mathur, Managing Director, Mathur Hospitality said that any kitchen design should take into consideration safety in relation to property, manpower, and equipment.

Easing the burden
While new guidelines on food safety and security are a little stringent and difficult to implement, there is technology available to assist those who have genuine will and the wherewithal.   Modern technological gadgets and equipments have really changed the way commercial kitchens are designed and operated in recent times.  Whether it is flooring and ceiling, storage and preservation equipment, modular kitchens and ovens,  chafing dishes, the modern commercial kitchens are a visual delight.  “Trend is to have an international standard kitchen, which is efficient & easy to maintain. Earlier we used to maintain a line for the equipment, but now we have to see that a kitchen looks nice in all aspects while functioning. With new technologies and imported equipment we are able to save space. Also, quite a few have dual or multi- usage/ purpose attachments, which allow a consultant to minimise internal kitchen space and give space to front of house facilities. Technology is also available to prepare & store International cuisines like Continental, Italian, American and others, but Indian food is something which requires last minute preparations and finishes. Probably technology still has to meet the Indian cuisine preparation standards,” says Mathur of Mathur Hospitality.

The Imperial New Delhi sets up food safety department

With a vision to establish a structured, stringent and analytical hygiene program across all levels of operations, The Imperial has launched a ‘Food safety and hygiene standards department’. This program aims to provide training and direction in food safety and hygiene standards maintenance at the hotel in compliance with FSSAI standards. The department has been designed to implement many thought-provoking strategies for a 360 degree food safety analysis program starting from supplies to the services offered to the guest or to the hotel associate.

Commenting on this initiative Vijay Wanchoo, Senior Executive Vice President & General Manager, The Imperial New Delhi elaborated, “The launch of FSHS department is a phenomenal step towards creating new benchmarks at The Imperial. The department has a full fledged micro biological laboratory - The Imperial Lab, equipped with the state-of-the-art technology to maintain food hygiene standards and conduct analysis under a focused approach.”

He added, “We plan to implement a ‘structured hygiene program’ for material procurement, kitchen, food production, spa areas, guest vehicles in the hotel premises as well as bathrooms in the suites. In the later stages, we aim to make the lab accredited for conducting tests and also an independent certificate provider for commercial purposes.”

“Hospitality kitchens are no more just cooking areas,” says Neel Chauhan.  Gone are the times when commercial kitchens were just a cooking area, now with the engagement of professional foodservice designers, technological advancements in food production equipment and influx of international hotel and restaurants operators, and varied international cuisines have made a significant impact on kitchen designs.  “Today’s kitchen has parameters such as effective space utilisation, energy efficient, easy for operations and should provide healthier and safer work environment for the chefs. There is clear and certain distinction of the flow starting from pre-preparation areas to food production and service.  The aesthetics inside the kitchen like right kind of flooring, walls, ceiling is equally important,” he added.

There is also a trend to go more Greener in terms of operations, waste disposal and recycling as food safety guidelines mandates procedures for hygiene in kitchens, notes Bhandari.  Due importance is being given to ‘green’ or sustainable hotels, non-polluting environmental clearances. Also, the growing popularity of LEED Certification has led to a new thought of line in terms of water and waste management. Investment in technology for water and energy conservation methods, recycling of waste and built-in hygienic safeguards to arrest kitchen pollution is increasing, informs Bhandari.

food_safety_and_hygiene_3.jpgVendors Outlook
In the last few years many of the major national and multi-national food and beverage companies have started asking their local distributors and wholesale dealers to obtain licenses under the FSSA. Under the Act, vendors and distributors can be held liable for selling products after its date of expiry, misbranding, and storing in unsafe conditions rather than the manufacturer. The Act states that food business operators functioning without license can be imprisoned for six months and fined up to Rs five lakh. Dealers found selling substandard products are liable to be fined up to Rs five lakh and those selling misbranded products, up to Rs three lakh. Obtaining these licenses will make the dealer conform to the stringent norms on storage, transporting, and distributing food products. Conforming to the Act will ensure that high food safety standards are maintained. The licences have to be renewed annually.

The strong world-wide trends for health and wellness have affected demand for modern kitchens. A lot of thought and planning goes into the modern, new-age, ergonomically designed kitchen. Vegetables and other perishables have to be kept fresh, and prepared so that they preserve their nutritional value, using as little fat as possible. Need and adherence to FSSA compliance is an Executive Chef’s top priority today.

food_safety_and_hygiene_4.jpgCommenting on FSSA Act, Marco Pesce, Country Manager, Electrolux Professional said, “For Electrolux, it is a great opportunity, as our equipments like the Air-o-steam Touchline and Air-o-convect Touchline combi ovens, Air-o-chill blast freezing systems, and pressure bratt pans support the new age culinary techniques like sous vide and cook n chill support the endeavours of the chef to keep up with hygiene and food safety trends in the commercial kitchen. Thus, we are by far the leaders in the industry in providing hi-end equipments which support the users’ requirement in maintaining food safety and hygiene.”

With more and more parameters coming in force, it is a matter of time that the Industry has to follow Global standards which will help provide world class service and with more professionalise approach this transition will become a smooth affair.

sanjeevak_marwaha.jpgSanjeevak Marwaha, Managing Director, Winterhalter India said, “With FSSA coming into force Hospitality & Food Industry will take extra measures to ensure cleanliness and hygiene. Winterhalter is extremely well placed to address these concerns from FSSA segment, as all our products are designed with a clear focus on delivering hygienically clean dishes to our customers. Also, with our wide sales network and market leading products, we are ready to partner the industry to embrace this change.”

He also added that Winterhalter ensures safety and hygiene standards and measures as per the regulatory norms. They import every single unit from Germany, Switzerland and UK. Since all their products are certified as per European Standards, they do not undertake any other certification and testing of machines in India. Winterhalter Gastronom GmbH was awarded certification for quality, environmental protection and occupational health and safety by the Swiss Association for Quality and Management Systems, and is amongst the first to get such a comprehensive certification.

rakesh_tara.jpgRakesh Tara, Country Manager – India, Angelo Po Grandi Cucine said, “Our products like Chicken Star Combi ovens are one of the product from our vast range which helps a Chef finish his work faster and in a very hygienic way, besides this there are various other equipment which in true sense are Chef’s companion. Besides our various equipments training and service programmes, our company is actively engaged in uplifting the conditions of the kitchen where food safety and hygiene are most important parameters and now even government is getting serious to check the hygienic conditions of the kitchen. This has also promoted us to introduce more user-friendly washing functions in our Combi ovens.”

With food preparation becoming a visible activity and show kitchens becoming popular, along with functional efficiency of the gadgets and equipments, the whole look and feel of the equipments have become increasingly important now. Commenting on how much this is putting extra pressure on manufacturers and vendors on R&D, Tara explained, “There is lot of pressure on manufacturers to make beautiful equipment which can be placed in front of the guests, instead of the closed kitchen as in earlier times. Hence, chic and sleek looking equipment is the need of the hour. Beautiful monoblocks with practically all colors are available from our stable and features like Combi oven with personalised signature for branding, smoker kit and pasteurisation kit are some of the new features of our products which place us above other manufacturers.”

‘FSSA: Extreme idea of deterrence would create  life-long resistance to the Act’

Dr V Pasupathy is a  renowned Food Scientist and a Certified Lead Auditor on Food Safety Management Systems in the country.  He has conducted umpteen workshops for Food Business Owners  (FBOs) and hospitality industry stakeholders on the impending Food Safety & Standards Act (FSSA).  In the light of FSSAI differing the deadline for conversion/renewal of existing licence for the fourth time for another six months, HospitalityBiz approached Dr Pasupathy to understand the loopholes in the Act, which makes its enforcement impossible and impractical.
  1. A self declaration act till date is not understood by state governments as they believe in blind enforcement.
  2. Our views and technical issues were sought by the FSSAI by  March 31,  2011. But  till date no answer or explanation has reached the industry. We were not even called for a discussion on these.
  3. Penalties are 10 to 200 times higher compared to the earlier PFA . Extreme idea of deterrence can become life long resistance and that is what has happened to this law.
  4. Much of the discourse on preconditions for the FBO s are to do with civic amenities . Local government bodies have miserable track record of performance and industry cannot be a victim for their non performance.
  5. In right earnest hotel industry across India conducted workshops.  I have personally travelled , taken 8- hour workshop  in each location covering more than 10000 owners and professionals. So our commitment cannot be doubted. No FBO is objecting to punishment for adulteration nor objects to hygiene assurance.
  6. Industry is scarcely represented in the Central Advisory Council. This makes the law unenforceable.
  7. The standards indicated are unreal as such raw materials don’t exist in India.
  8. Pesticide residue level is a laughing stock as neither central government nor state government nor universities nor scientists nor academicians who are behind the  drafting can show us any sample in this country without these residues.
  9. There is huge contradiction between stakeholding Ministries of the government like Chemicals & Fertiliser , Agriculture Ministry and Health Ministry. No one has answers but they expect FBO s to follow them.
  10. No state government budget or Central government budget has any plans for argumentation of the FSSAI with provision for laboratory facilities or resources deployment , etc .

In short, FSSA is unenforceable not because industry rejects or underestimates the significance of food safety.  As entrepreneurs customers are important to them and  their well being is paramount.  Business men don’t get dismissed or reelected nor do they apply for transfers.  For most of them the business they do is their social identity card.

If drainage systems work ,if garbage clearance happens on time, if government slaughter houses are professionally run, if fruit and vegetables market have bare minimum hygiene, if ground water is without pesticide residue, FSSAI will become the act that it wants to be or else it will continue to be an incomplete bridge. As a scientist, I am positive but worried. My nation needs food safety but through a methodology that is more practical.


food_safety_and_hygiene_5.jpgA lot of hotels are applying international standard, not only International brands but also local ones. Apart from FSSA, ETL approvals or HACCP certification is becoming mandatory in India also. The new Electrolux Hood Type dishwashers come with ETL Sanitation Approval and comply with DIN 10512 standards. The excellent washing and rinsing performances of the dishwashers result in the highest standards of cleanliness (the wash water is free from food residue) and hygiene (total detergent removal), and the high quality rinsing results in complete sanitation.

marco_pesce.jpg“Our machines are HACCP certified, and allow HACCP monitoring via an integrated PC network, thus equipping the Chef with ready solution to maintain high level of hygiene efficiency. Most importantly, Electrolux Touchline ovens provide fully automatic cleaning, from four pre-set cycles including the new green functions of the integrated cleaning system. This eco-friendly cleaning option optimises the consumption of rinse aid, electricity and water; reducing up to 50 per cent of the running costs; saving energy time after time and preserving the environment. At the end of the Shift, a Chef can leave a perfectly clean oven, ready for next day’s cooking,” added Pesce.

Food safety officials to intensify checks

The Tamil Nadu Food Safety and Drug Administration Department (Food Safety Wing) will step up inspections of restaurants and eateries in the district as part of a crackdown on unsafe food.
The drive is to eliminate food products that are harmful to health. 
Those violating the norms will face stringent legal action such as filing of cases under the Food Safety and Standard Act, R. Kathiravan, Designated Officer, Tamil Nadu Food Safety and Drug Administration Department (Food Safety Wing), told The Hindu here on Sunday.
Food Safety officers took 31 samples in the past two months. 
Of these, six were found unsafe, one was sub-standard, 11 were misbranded and the rest were found to have conformed to all norms. Samples were also lifted during ‘annadhanam’ at a temple festival recently. No harmful substances were detected in these samples.
Further, in a boost to these efforts, the microbiological tests have also commenced at the Government Food Analysis Laboratory here. 
Microbiological tests are vital to detect growth of salmonella, a bacterium which can cause food poisoning.
Coimbatore has one of the six food analysis laboratories in Tamil Nadu that are approved under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. 
The rest are at Chennai, Salem, Thanjavur, Tirunelveli and Madurai.
Dr. Kathiravan said that fruit shops will also come under the scanner in the next few months to prevent artificial ripening of fruits done through the use of calcium carbide. The major health hazard is the acetylene gas emitted by calcium carbide. 
This targets the neurological system and reduces the oxygen supply to the brain.
While short-term effects include sleeping disorders and headaches, he said that the long term effects are memory loss, seizures, mouth ulcers, skin rashes, renal problems and possibly, even cancer.
Any one having information on artificial ripening of fruits could mail the information to dofssacbe@gmail.com. All information will be kept confidential and action taken, Dr. Kathiravan said.

DINAMALAR NEWS


Better safe than sorry


  • You could be at risk of consuming adulterated food
You could be at risk of consuming adulterated food 

Food adulteration is easy money for traders, but slow poisoning, disease or even death for consumers. How can we detect whether what we eat is safe? Geeta Padmanabhan finds out from experts
Call it “shaam ke side effects”. Binging on crisp vadais at the office party got us all down with stomach cramps, retching and diarrhoea. Food poisoning, we agreed. Used oil, we speculated, relieved our innards were still with us after the night-long purging. We also discovered: Lab tests in mice at Weill Cornell Medical College revealed a toxin made by Clostridium perfringens caused Multiple Sclerosis (MS)-like damage in the brain. Earlier work by the same team, published in PLoS ONE, had identified the toxin-producing strain of C. perfringens in a young woman with MS — a neurological condition affecting 40,000-50,000 people in India.
“We may be eating dangerous dye, sawdust, soap, stone, industrial starch or aluminium foil along with food,” said Assistant Professor of Chemistry Leena Singh, who has done research in adulteration. Adulteration is easy money for traders and slow poisoning, disease or death for consumers. What we eat can be unsafe, unhygienic or harmful when nutritious elements in them are killed. “An easy example of food adulteration is vanaspati in desi ghee.” Adulterants when used in illicit drugs are called cutting agents, deliberate addition of toxic adulterants to food or other products for human consumption is known as poisoning. These adulterants are often highly carcinogenic and when consumed over a continuous period of time can stunt growth and cause serious ailments.
Contamination at every stage
From growth to gourmet table, all areas are open to poisoning. Chemical fertilizers and pesticides contaminate food, bacteria and parasites travelling through wind and water settle snugly in the soil to foul the food grown. Whether in a large factory or in our kitchen, if we aren't scrupulously clean, food processing can be a major source of cross-contamination — specially through natural bacteria in the intestines of animals. Food stored incorrectly — uncooked piece of meat kept next to a bunch of grapes — can transfer bacteria and other contaminants from one food item to another. During preparation, a person with flu or gastroenteritis can pass on germs, a chopping board used for unwashed meat and then for vegetables can be a vehicle for contamination. Unwashed hands, dirty kitchen spaces, cockroaches and mice are all contamination carriers.
Adulteration is a form of cheating, Dr. Leena argues. But how do we judge the quality/purity of food items we buy? Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has developed quick tests for some adulterants in food, which help consumers screen food particles, she said. It is a long list, but you could try some of them. Add 5 ml of solvent ether to 5 ml of honey, shake it well, and decant it in a petri dish. When the ether evaporates, add 2-3 ml resorcinol. See a cherry red colour? It's sugar/jaggery, honey! Sprinkle a teaspoonful of ground spices in a cup of water. Powdered bran, smelly dung or sawdust will float on the surface. Turmeric powder is too bright? It's metanil yellow if a violet colour persists when concentrated hydrochloric acid (HCl) is added to it. Put pepper corns into a beaker containing carbon tetra-chloride. Papaya seeds float to the top, pepper settles down.
Accredited labs
You could also try one of the accredited food testing labs in Chennai, Kochi, Bengaluru or Hyderabad. Check out: (http://www.fssai.gov.in/Portals/0/Pdf/NABL_accred_ted_food_testing%2828-11-2011%29.pdf). “We are a dedicated lab for food testing as per requirements of FSSAI,” says Ashok Kumar, Chennai Testing Laboratory (22501757). “We use high-end instruments like GCMS and Flame photometer to assess purity, and adulterants are discovered through chemical tests. We have approved standard procedures to test food.” The lab is equipped to test dairy products, cooked food, spices, edible oils, powdered spices, tea powders, wheat grains, maida and rice, he says.
But then, prevention is better than cure, so make sure you buy food products that are not only unadulterated but also “ecologically ethical”, says Leena. They should be ethically made/sourced and traded without a negative impact on environment or humanity, should not have been tested on animals and must be organic, sustainable, natural, fair-trade products. Support grocery stores that go for minimal packaging. Stay firmly away from packaged, ready-to-eat or partially-cooked food items. Adulteration is almost impossible to detect or remove from these.
Buy packed items of well-known companies, buy stuff at reliable retail shops and recognised outlets, check the ISI mark or Agmark, FSSAI, buy products in air-tight containers, resist the craze for artificially-coloured sweets and buy only from reputed shops, says Ashok Kumar. “Do not buy sweets or snacks kept in the open; avoid buying things from street-side vendors.” Saying no to the boiled peanut mix on Elliot's beach, then?

Alarming urea content found in milk

Faridkot, March 2
A study conducted by Greenpeace India, a voluntary organisation working on environmental issues, has reported an alarming rise in the concentration of harmful nitrates in drinking water in Malwa. For this, scientists blame rampant use of chemical fertilisers. 
The quality of milk is also believed to be critical in Punjab as the high use of synthetic nitrogen in green fodder and dry cattle feed is going unchecked, said Gopikrishna SR, senior campaigner, Greenpeace India.
About 20 per cent of all sampled wells in Malwa have nitrate levels above the WHO safety limit of 50 mg per litre, the study mentioned. The samples were collected from 50 villages in Bathinda, Muktsar and Ludhiana districts.
He said the high nitrate content in underground water had been particularly affecting the health of children in rural areas. 
The urea concentration in cattle feed is also found much more than the permissible limit of 1.5 per cent, the study said. 
The practice is adopted to raise milk protein, said Harminder Singh Sandhu, former assistant director in the Animal Husbandry Department.

Importers, restaurateurs concerned about imported food labelling norms

The labelling of imported foods continues to be a cause for concern for food importers and restaurants that are dependent on imported raw material for their fare. 
This has forced the proprietors of several restaurants to hike their prices by 30-40 per cent. Many importers, who have been grappling with delays in getting the raw material, have shut shop. 
Several lots of food items are stuck at various entry points due to the inadequacy of information about the material [as mandated by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)]. 
Sources in the industry informed that about 400 containers, estimated to be worth approximately Rs 700-800 crore, have been held up at the entry points, which include airports.
They contain potato pellets, pulses, processed foods, biscuits, frozen foods (including seafood), vegetables, herbs, cheese, meat and sauces. But importers have stopped importing chocolates. 
The norms require makers of packaged food items to list the contents in English, the ingredients used and their nutritional values, and the producer’s name, address and country of origin.
All the information should be mentioned in the format prescribed by the country’s apex food regulator.
FSSAI has been conducting 100 per cent sampling and mandated the approval of the foods being imported. The Indian regulator’s approval could take between six months and a year.
Industry experts opined that this could have been done to discourage imports to save dollars, given the economic situation (the fiscal deficit).
Importers
Amit Lohani, convener, Forum of Indian Food Importers (FIFI), said that despite several representations by them, the issue remained unresolved. 
“We represent about 400 importers. Of these, about 17 importers have shut down their businesses,” he informed, suggesting that the norms be set on the basis of risk-based analysis. 
“The average duty levied on food imports is 50-60 per cent. And the detention is hampering our trade. This has forced us to consider a new business,” he stated.
Restaurateurs
Vikrant Batra, co-owner, Café Delhi Heights, said the issue has been persisting for a while, and since some ingredients couldn’t be substituted with Indian alternatives, it was getting difficult.
“In the last three to four months, the prices of imported raw food materials has gone up by 30-40 per cent due to the fluctuating dollar prices and shortages of ingredients,” he added.
“The prices also have risen due to delays. We offer worldwide cuisines, and to give authentic tastes, we have to rely on such imported raw materials,” Batra said. 
“We cannot hike the prices, or compromise on the quality. We use herbs, vegetables, cheeses and meats to make the dishes authentic, as we cater primarily to tourists,” he added. 
“It is difficult to get the ingredients of a similar quality in India to substitute the imported ones,” Batra said.
It is not only the restaurant and café chains, but the hospitality sector, as a whole, which is grappling with this problem. 
“Supply is short, and people are selling food at rates as exorbitant as 3-4 times their regular prices,” stated Devendra Kumar, vice-president, FnB production, Le Meridian New Delhi.
He added, “If we have to prepare an authentic French or Japanese dish, we need imported ingredients.” 
“Some sauces, condiments, lamb and fish are not available as per demand. There is shortage of high-quality fish, such as salmon,” Kumar said.
“We know there are regulations that need to be complied with. However, the traders should be imparted with information about them,” he added.
“There are differences in regulatory requirement in different countries. It is in the interest of everyone that the regulations be framed based on feasibility,” Kumar stated.
“And people should be given some time to comply with the norms as it affects the operations,” he added.
Experts expected the problem, which has arisen due to a communication gap, to be sorted out in the next couple of months.
Anil Bhandari, hospitality consultant, stated, “There was a communication gap between the importers and the FSSAI. Moreover, there was a shortage of proper storage facilities at airports.” 
“And some traders thought they could get away with this. We expect the situation to be back to normal in the next 45-60 days,” he added.
It is pertinent to mention here that importers and the FSSAI were in talks, and some issues regarding the labelling norms were said to have been resolved. 
The importers were of the opinion that the regulator should clarify some regulations and give them some time to implement the norms.
Labelling requirements as per Food Safety and Standards Regulations, 2011
The labelling language should be English
The names, trade names and descriptions of the food items should be mentioned on the package
The names of the ingredients used in them should be in descending order of their composition weight or volume, as the case may be
Vegetarian or non-vegetarian should be declared by affixing the symbol for vegetarian or non-vegetarian
The package should contain the name and address of the manufacturer and the manufacturing unit
In cases where food articles are imported into India, it should contain the name and address of the importer in India
It should mention the net weight, number or measure of volume of contents
The label should mention the batch number, lot number or code number
It should specify the month and year in which the commodity was manufactured or prepared
The best before date should be printed on the label (It could also be expressed in terms of number of months before the best before date)
It should specify the nutritional information per 100g or 100ml of each serving of the product.
The Food Safety and Standards Regulations (FSSR), 2011, states that vegetable fats are not permitted in chocolate. The label must specify this.