In the fall of 2021, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced that it was mobilizing a stronger and more...
Salmonella is a leading bacterial cause of foodborne illness in the U.S., and poultry remains a vehicle for this pathogen. Salmonella is enormously diverse more...
Raw chicken provides all of the necessary conditions needed to harbor and support the growth of spoilage and pathogenic microorganisms during processing more...
Industry 4.0 delivers technology that allows for processes to be connected to each other inside the plant and provides remote access to perform many functions more...
Chicken meat production is an increasingly important part of the Australian food industry, as chicken meat is the most consumed protein in the country more...
Poultry is an affordable source of high quality protein and globally, the most consumed meat. However, there are challenges that the poultry industry more...
Once you have made the decision to drive digital transformation, thought about how the initiative fits the company’s strategy, and vetted the financial more...
Complex food supply chains in the current global market require a farm-to-fork approach to ensure supply chain integrity for delivering safe and authentic more...
Editor’s note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association more...
Since 2013, woody breast (WB) has been the most prevalent meat quality defect in the broiler industry, affecting 30-40% of chicken breast meat from broilers more...
Most bacon is processed as heat-treated, not fully cooked and not shelf stable, which potentially allows for the survival of pathogens. However, as almost more...
Flexible packaging films have become widely used for packaging meat and meat products as well as many other consumer products. Flexible films provide more...
Enhancing flavor and texture of meat, poultry and fish products with injected brines, marinades and phosphates is widely applied as a way to add value more...
Water immersion chilling has been the primary means of reducing poultry carcass temperature for food safety and quality purposes in the U.S. for many more...
When defining clean-labeled meat and poultry products, consumers frequently cite a mixed bag of attributes. It might be “pasture raised,” more...
A review of enforcement actions for humane handling taken between January 2012 and June 2016 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety more...
All products end up on a conveyor at some point, making effective sanitation of this essential piece of equipment and its components a high priority. more...
Addition of water and non-meat ingredients to intact muscle meats or muscle portions can provide many improvements in product quality and variety. Tenderness more...
By R. Ramanathan*, G. G. Mafi, D. L. VanOverbeke, Department of Animal Science, Oklahoma State University The characteristic bright cherry-red color of more...
Editor's Note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
Currently, a major portion of consumer complaints regarding woody breast in poultry is from foodservice operators. Those complaints are focused on the more...
Despite what activists and social media sites say about white striping (WS) – take a look at anything from Cosmopolitan to BuzzFeed to Good Housekeeping more...
Boneless, skinless breast meat is the popular poultry meat choice among consumers, leading to an increased need for white meat. With this increased consumption more...
Editor's Note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
What is "clean” label? Better descriptors might be "understandable” or “recognizable” label. Traditional ingredients are often more...
The consumer is king. It’s a mantra that we’ve heard for years, yet it is increasingly important today. Almost two-thirds of modern consumers more...
An April 2016 GAO industrial safety/health report centering on the meat/poultry industry revealed a marked decline of reported injuries/illness rates more...
Though transgenic animal and plants have existed for more than three decades, in just the last 10 years, new methods for the production more...
The demand for reduced sodium products is obvious in the marketplace. Current health initiatives are suggesting that most Americans reduce their sodium more...
Around 1.2 million cases of foodborne illnesses are due to salmonella. Of those, around 360,000 are due to products that are under the control of USDA’s more...
Editor's note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
Many animal handlers are not fully aware of how their behavior effects the ultimate quality of the meat being produced. By explaining the importance of more...
Editor’s Note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association more...
This article concerning OSHA’s revised May 2012 Hazard Communication Standard (HCS) 29 CFR 1910.1200 will center on various new requirements more...
Editor's note: This article is part of an occasional series written by the North American Meat Institute exclusively for Meatingplace. Unless your establishment more...
Editor’s note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association more...
Uniform color is an important component of consumer satisfaction of processed meat products, and consumers will turn to other products if their products more...
The National Pork Board has been involved with meat-quality projects and initiatives for more than 25 years. Currently, the producer-led organization more...
The characteristic pink color of ham has always played a significant role in consumer preference for ham. Consumers prefer the color to have a generally more...
Editor’s note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association more...
In 2011, a multi-state foodborne disease outbreak linked to consumption of ground turkey contaminated with of Salmonella Heidelberg sickened 136 people more...
Within the last several years, consumption of poultry meat has increased to approximately 88 pounds per capita – specifically in the areas of boneless more...
Within the last several years, consumption of poultry meat has increased considerably – specifically in the areas of further processed and ready-to-eat more...
(Editor's Note: This article is an excerpt from The Meat Processor’s Journal, an industry education e-book series jointly developed by Handtmann more...
Ultraviolet (UV) light-based systems are emerging both as mild thermal and non-thermal techniques that have much to offer in regard to sustainability more...
Increased carcass weights and the resulting increased size of primal and subprimal cuts can pose multiple technical challenges for packers and further more...
This article will focus on unstunned religious slaughter of cattle, primarily glatt kosher (shechita) and halal, as these methods present many unique more...
Bacon continues to grow in popularity with consumers, but the manufacturing of bacon is a continual challenge driven by raw material quality and costs more...
The use of cold is one of the oldest forms of conservation of perishable products. Chicken products are not an exception, as they require refrigeration more...
The markets in the poultry industry have changed significantly just over the past 15 years. In efforts to satisfy demand while also improving efficiency more...
Shelf-stable meat and poultry products have been manufactured since the beginning of meat processing; however, much has changed over the years. The emergence more...
As the meat industry has evolved and genetics have improved, the size of cattle has changed dramatically the average cow, steer or heifer weighed 900-1 more...
Editor's note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
When there is no time to clean floors or modify the surface, granulated barn lime is a go-to resource for an immediate fix of almost any slippery situation more...
For meat and poultry products, allergen recalls have continued to increase in number each year and in recent years have occurred at a higher frequency more...
Product defects are a continual obstacle in all processed meat operations. Pinholes, air pockets, bind problems, color problems – the list goes more...
The dry sausage sector of the U.S. meat industry, unlike other parts of the world – particularly Europe – represents a small but thriving more...
Editor's Note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
Editor's Note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
Although sodium reduction efforts are not as focused as they have been in recent years, strong interest still remains regarding the appropriate methods more...
Defined as ensuring the availability of nutritious and wholesome food for all people, food security has become an essential consideration for USDA and more...
Blade tenderizing of meat and poultry products has been a common industry practice for many decades. By 1975, it was estimated that more than 90 percent more...
This article addresses three current issues in the meat industry and how integrated research can be used to solve these problems. One of the greatest more...
Water is a vital resource for the whole poultry industry, playing a significant role from farm to plant. At the producer level, it is responsible for more...
Sodium reduction, regardless of opinion, is a phenomenon that has taken a strong hold in the meat and poultry industry. Although the concern of what “excessive” more...
If you are planning a new plant, in the middle of a retrofit at your packaging area, adding a new cooking or new cooling / freezing line, or looking towards more...
Up to 40 percent of the food produced is never consumed. Furthermore, the greatest source of this food waste is the consumer. Attention is now being given more...
Emulsified meat products such as frankfurters and bologna make up a very unique category of processed meats because of the processing technology that more...
Meat judging programs are currently the most effective tool for the recruitment and development of future meat science technologists in existence today more...
Editor's note: This is part of an occasional series of exclusive articles provided by authors commissioned by the American Meat Science Association in more...
In the animal protein industry, the carcasses further intended for human consumption must be cooled as soon as possible after evisceration. The temperature more...
Poultry deli meats are very popular in the U.S. These are premium products in the marketplace and lend themselves well to appetizers, salads, snacks and more...
Visual defects found in cooked sausage products can originate from a number of sources – some which can be prevented easily while others can be more...
Ergonomics is about the science of fitting workplace conditions and job demands to the capabilities of the working population. There are two primary methods more...
Although there are fewer food safety concerns on whole muscle cuts and whole muscle products compared to ground meat products when they are either mechanically more...
As “naturally cured”, (a.k.a. “indirectly cured”, “uncured”) processed meat products continue to maintain a strong more...
In food processing and manufacturing, a biofilm is a conglomerate of microorganisms that along with some organic and inorganic materials form a slimy more...
In January 1998, the United States red meat and poultry industry changed forever the manner in which inspection was conducted during processing. The implementation more...
Exposure to live electricity can be fatal at less than 100 milliamps, according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health. As a reference more...
At the point-of-consumption, consumers rely on the color of cooked meat as an indicator of doneness. Brown interiors are often considered as safe, whereas more...
Many smaller processors often feel overwhelmed by the idea of adding a chemical intervention to their slaughter process. Whatever the concern, adding more...
Cooked beef patties will often change in dimension (size, shape, thickness) during the cooking process. A variety of factors contributes to the shape more...
In recent months, the USDA has stressed that recalls for undeclared allergens are one of the most frequent and fastest-growing areas of product recalls more...
Editor’s note: This is the fifth and final article in a five-part series analyzing the most prevalent pathogen-food combinations in the United States more...
In recent months, the USDA has stressed that recalls for undeclared allergens are one of the most frequent and fastest-growing areas of product recalls more...
Editor’s note: This is the fourth article in a five-part series analyzing the most prevalent pathogen-food combinations in the United States. Using more...
OSHA defines ergonomics as “the science of fitting workplace conditions and job demands to the capabilities of the working population.” Although more...
Yield is important to processors because small changes can have a significant impact to the economics of processing. Processors strive to maximize yield more...
Editor’s note: This the third article in a five-part series analyzing the most prevalent pathogen-food combinations in the United States. Using more...
Ingredient use, raw material availability, and environmental factors may pose challenges when making further processed poultry products. But there are more...
Reducing sodium and fat in product formulations leads to potential quality and yield challenges that are best addressed through ingredient and processing more...
Editor’s note: This the second article in a five-part series analyzing the most prevalent pathogen-food combinations in the United States. Using more...
The need to control bacteria on the surface of fresh meat is becoming increasingly important – particularly in light of recent events that have more...
Editor’s note: This the first article in a five-part series analyzing the most prevalent pathogen-food combinations in the United States. Using more...
As consumers increasingly demand versatility and variety of poultry meat, processors are increasing the amount of further processed products. One such more...
Pork fat quality – the firmness and oxidative stability of the fat itself – can have a significant effect on the quality of the finished products more...
An absolutely essential – yet often overlooked – component of every operation, water is used for cleaning of equipment, utensils, tables, more...
Sausage fermentation has been utilized for centuries as an effective preservation practice for dry and semi-dry sausages. Relying on the lactic acid bacteria more...
Processing environments are cold and wet – it’s the nature of the process. However, this type of environment can lead to issues in product more...
The current U.S. poultry industry market segments include whole birds (with or without giblets), parts and further processed products. The value of production more...
Refrigerated ready-to-cook (RTC) meals are fresh, never frozen and are cooked in the package by consumers using a microwave oven. They appeal to more...
Lowering sodium is a popular trend for meat processors to make. Government influence has recently caused many food processors to consider methods to lower more...
Boneless broiler breast meat is a staple product in the poultry meat market for use in retail, further processing, and foodservice. More recently, a greater more...
Further-processed products have increased in the poultry industry in the last few years. Consumers are demanding more products with convenience, versatility more...
Consumer interest in organic foods continues to grow because more and more consumers wish to avoid pesticides, antibiotics and other chemicals often used more...
Barbecue and grilled flavors are popular with American consumers and there is great potential for increasing production and sales of “precooked” more...
Ground poultry products, both chicken and turkey, have enjoyed rising popularity as consumers perceive them to be leaner and perhaps more healthful alternatives more...
Ohio State University researchers have found a new porcine calicivirus – similar to the St-Valerien swine virus – in nearly 24 percent of more...
Genetics set the level of pork quality. Everything else you do can screw it up, says David Meisinger, executive director of the U.S. Pork Center of Excellence more...
Removing the feathers from chicken carcasses before selling is mandatory in most countries, and the equipment used for this purpose in a commercial operation more...
Broilers are carefully cared for during the grow-out period to ensure the full expression of their genetic potential, producing meaty, plump, defect-free more...
Listeria is an environmental bacterium that can turn up in almost any location. A saying in the ready-to-eat meat business goes, “If you can’t more...
Poultry meat consumers in the United States tend to choose breast meat over dark meat for various reasons. This preference has led to an excess of dark more...
Somehow the words “curing” or “cured” have become bad words in the vocabulary of the consuming public. The idea that a meat processor more...
U.S. hog processors could learn from their counterparts in southeast Mexico. There, they remove the skin and associated fats before chilling, saving time more...
In poultry processing, unexplained yield loss can happen at many stages. Second processing in poultry begins at the exit of the chiller and can include more...
Natural foods have enjoyed dramatic growth in consumer interest and market sales since the early 1990s. Sales increases of more than 20 percent per year more...
Not a day goes by in any poultry processing plant without some discussion of "yield." Since it reflects the potential profitability of the operation, more...
Water is one of the most widely used nonmeat ingredients in processed meats, and yet water is the ingredient that is most often overlooked when considering more...
As with most things in life, it is always important to sit back and review the basics from time to time. With a 1-year-old at home (and two more on the more...
Ozone is a unique sanitizing agent that is generated by splitting oxygen—which normally exists as dioxygen (O2) molecules—into single oxygen more...
Consumers make purchasing decisions with their eyes. A product’s visual quality is the first thing that must pass muster in the retail setting. more...
Preference for bright red color is an important factor in prompting a consumer to purchase a package of ground beef. Consumers equate bright red color more...
Color is perhaps the most influential of all organoleptic senses consumers use to make decisions. Most consumers perceive color as a sign of product quality more...
Bacteriophages have become one of the newest weapons for food processors to use in the war against foodborne bacteria that cause human illnesses. The more...
Hamburger patties are notorious for changing shape and form during cooking. A variety of factors contribute to the shape change of hamburger patties, more...
With demand soaring for bacon, sausage and smoked meats of all kinds, large and small plants have seen an opportunity to push more product through the more...
Production facilities measure success based on the amount of high-quality products that are sold to commerce. For slicing facilities, superior meat quality more...
Dark, firm and dry (DFD) meat can be the result of prolonged stress in animals prior to slaughter, either because the animals have been underfed, or they more...
Meat emulsions, or meat batters, the best examples of which are frankfurters and large-diameter bologna, are complex mixtures made up of very fine fat more...
Salt is the key ingredient in most processed meat formulations. However, low-sodium products are an important and growing market segment. USDA allows more...
It has been documented many times that the visual appearance of meat products in retail display is one of the most critical factors that consumers use more...
A properly working fat analyzer is essential for formulation, labeling and yield of meat products. In-line analyzers can increase profitability by quickly more...
Pre-slaughter stress is an important contributor to meat quality. Animals get stressed at different times, from the farm all the way to unloading, resting more...
Typically microbial intervention is considered a step just before or after chilling poultry carcasses. While these procedures have proven effective in more...
Fresh meat binding involves not only assembling trimmings, binding them and selling them as a restructured product. Fresh meat binding's potential goes more...
In general, whole-muscle cuts pose less risk for causing food-borne illness than ground products because bacteria on the surface of whole-muscle cuts more...
A great deal of publicity over the past 30 years or so has focused on the potential for forming carcinogens in cooked meats. Concerns about carcinogens more...
Quality defects in deli meat slices can result from any number of variables, including how product is prepared, cooked, chilled, loaded and sliced. Accordingly more...
The manufacture of dry sausage is probably the oldest form of meat preservation. Dry sausage was undoubtedly discovered by accident and gradually evolved more...
Pale, soft, and exudative (PSE) is a quality defect that exists in some broiler and turkey breast meat. This condition was identified as a problem in more...
Chlorine has long been used as a disinfectant in poultry chillers. However, controlling the level is often misunderstood by those using it. For chlorine more...
Pest control in food processing is essential, but difficult and expensive. It presents some unique challenges, not the least of which is that the practice more...
Freezing is one of the most effective methods used for preserving meat, and it can substantially increase its shelf life. However, freezing can also cause more...
Today, more consumers are demanding high-quality ham products that are thin-sliced in an attractive modified atmosphere package (MAP) at the retail level more...
Two words for deli meat processors looking to improve the quality, yield and efficiency of their slicing operations: crust freezing. The procedure calls more...
There is no silver bullet for Salmonella control. In fact, the only proven method involves intervention steps throughout the system. Focus is frequently more...
Biomapping has become the "hot topic" method of locating potential food safety threats in poultry processing. Microbiological samples are taken at each more...
In recent years a number of antimicrobials have been developed with the goal of inhibiting or killing pathogenic and spoilage bacteria. These compounds more...
Biofilms are communities of microorganisms that attach to surfaces and colonize given favorable conditions such as the presence of moisture and nutrients more...
Tight margins and increasing input costs demand an even sharper focus on optimizing production yields during sausage manufacturing. Product "giveaway more...
Oxidative deterioration of fat in meat can take place before and after cooking, and it can be caused by many different factors including exposure to light more...
Yields drive profitability, and a frustrating place to lose yields is during slicing and packaging. Loading product to maximize slice yields may seem more...
The obvious reason to avoid product defects is the desire to meet consumer expectations. However, product defects also affect process yields. The most more...
Now that shrink film no longer is simply used to bind and protect product during distribution, but also to display it once it arrives at its intended more...
"Persistent pinking" a pink color that remains in uncured, cooked meat products even after cooking at relatively high temperatures is more...
The advantages of precooked meats are clear, just as it's clear that "warmed over flavor" (WOF) isn't one of them. The product may look like meat, but more...
As efficient as they are, metal detectors can be prone to misreadings if not carefully calibrated, or if operators deviate from basic principles of installation more...
Packaging materials for meat and meat products offer a wide range of properties for specific applications, but one of their most important characteristics more...
Fat separation and pickle pockets are manufacturing defects that have a direct impact on the appearance of bacon. Slice integrity is a very important more...
Porcine stress syndrome is associated with a specific genetic condition, and is also known as the stress gene, the halothane gene or malignant hypothermia more...
Trimmings from beef and pork are among the most widely used raw meat ingredients. The quality and handling of trimmings affects final product quality more...
Uniformity in burger production is vital to ensure an attractive product, as well as to prevent giveaway and consequent margin erosion. Producing the more...
Post-processing contamination of ready-to-eat meat and poultry products with listeria monocytogenes is a major concern for the food industry. After cooking more...
Strange as it may seem, treatments that kill certain pathogenic bacteria in cooked foods can create ideal conditions for spawning others, notably Clostridium more...
High-speed, precision slicing can go wrong in many ways. If the blade isn't kept honed, or the shear bar is too loose, for instance, slices will likely more...
For plants where line speed does not justify the investment in an automatic evisceration operation or where the cost and availability of labor still are more...
Pre-blending has become an important tool to improve the yield and consistency of sausage. First, to avoid confusion, let's define pre-blending as the more...
Cold shortening or muscle shortening is a process that occurs as meat chills, immediately after slaughter. Fact is, all species undergo more...
Condensation is one of the most vexing problems in the poultry industry today. The need to refrigerate areas within the plant to minimize bacterial growth more...
Cleaning and sanitizing equipment and food-contact surfaces are the two most important activities of a meat processor's quality-assurance program. No more...
The term "value-added" typically is associated with retail foods, either to denote quality, convenience or both. These days, foodservice providers also more...
Demand for low-fat and low-sodium products is growing, and likely will continue to do so as an aging population grows more interested in "healthy" foods more...
It is not uncommon to see batches of jerky or other meat snacks that have substantially different moisture levels despite having undergone similar processing more...
Nitrates and nitrites were first added to meat to preserve it, as they inhibit bacterial growth. However, no cured ham today would appear authentic without more...
The term "skinless frankfurter" is really something of a misnomer. It simply describes a sausage product that has been stripped of its casing once a secondary more...
Cooking oil is a major expense for any frying operation. As the zero-trans-fat movement continues and new oils are used, which are often more expensive more...
Trying to manufacture a cooked ground beef product with good binding properties can be difficult, since the natural tendency is for meat particles to more...
As regulatory agencies and public interest groups continue to make salmonella and other pathogen detection a priority, it is necessary for processors more...
Poor coating adhesion can greatly affect final product quality and appearance. Luckily there are some tried-and-true methods of improving batter and coating more...
Iridescence is the multicolored appearance on the surface of meat, especially cooked and sliced beef. Consumers often associate unusual color with spoiled more...
With cooking, processors must strike a delicate balance between killing pathogens, but at temperatures that don't stick a fork in the product itself. more...
Profitable meat processing requires efficient scheduling to minimize the downtime and product loss associated with changeovers. Growing concern about more...
Using marinades to improve taste and texture is one of the simplest methods of adding value to meat products. However, when mistakes are made during formulation more...
Flavor is elusive, but also critical to the success of most food products, barbecue meat included. The problem is that, over time, the flavor of barbecue more...
Relationships between meat processors and inspectors from USDA's Food Safety Inspection Service have in some cases grown more difficult since FSIS switched more...
The Food Safety and Inspection Service definition of a recall is the voluntary removal of product from consumer or trade channels to protect the public more...
I was involved in a massive product recall 25 years ago for dieldrin — a chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticide — in broilers. At the time, we did not have more...
Recent episodes in Japan and Hong Kong suggest that our trade partners mean business on the issue of the specified risk materials associated with bovine more...
Developing an effective sharpening program for grinder hole plates and knives reduces downtime and enhances produce consistency. Plates and knives are more...
As more and more meat processors move into the prepared foods arena, they are likely to encounter ingredients -- and suppliers – they never have before more...
One of the constants of plant operations is that parts break, fail or just plain wear out. Whatever the cause of failure, operators essentially have three more...