Equipment Evolves to Meet Cleaning and Sanitation Challenges

New technology is helping processors solve traditional and current sanitation problems while helping them address labor and resource issues.

Food safety equipment inspection
Investing in updated cleaning and sanitation systems can help processors pass inspections and consistently produce safe food for consumers.
PSSI

A processor only needs to look at the elevating number of food recalls the past few years to understand that any shortcuts on cleaning and sanitation can lead to trouble, and perhaps permanently damage a company's bottom line.

“Sanitation is key for assisting with food spoilage and allergen recalls. With the increasing number of ready-to-eat facilities due to our ever-changing food demands, we need to ensure that a clean facility is delivered to production day after day for a heathy food supply,” says Stephanie Goff, technical services lead, safe foods chemical innovations, PSSI. “Sanitation has changed in that we are now driven by data and numbers and not just by if it looks clean. We now understand that sanitation can impact recalls and improve production cycles if performed correctly and efficiently.”

With an ongoing labor shortage and tight budgets at some companies, cleaning and sanitation programs have been tasked to evolve and meet many challenges that didn’t exist years ago. Here, we’ll address some of the key areas related to cleaning and sanitation, and what new tools and technology are available for manufacturers to implement into their operations.

Importance of sanitation

Cleaning and sanitation are so vital to a food processing operation that it might be easy for some to view it as a simple routine where skipping steps to save time or money is occasionally acceptable. So, just as a reminder, here are a few reasons why this part of processing is crucial.

“Once production for the day is completed, the clock starts for the growth of microbes that are in the environment or hitchhiked through the process,” says Goff. “Cleaning is the only way to ensure that cross-contamination doesn’t occur between product types or marinades which could lead to allergen concerns.”

What used to be acceptable in a daily cleaning and sanitation routine has changed over the years, with more attention paid to deep cleaning the equipment and the environment that surrounds it. Glenn Quinty, senior design engineer at ThermOmegaTech, notes that cleaning methods that used to be acceptable but are no longer acceptable include: “visual inspection as the sole cleaning verification method, inadequate frequency of cleaning, inadequate drying of surfaces, lack of separation of cleaning tools and equipment, and insufficient sanitizer concentration.”


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Jason White, field audit and support at PSSI, adds, “In the past, acceptable cleaning practices could mean as long as it looked clean or mostly clean it must be clean. The use of high pressure during pre-rinsing sometimes was good enough to make equipment look clean. Other past practices consisted of not titrating cleaning solutions, poor application of cleaning and sanitizing solution, high-pressure water used during the post rinse, hosing the floors prior to and after the final sanitizer application, and simply taking shortcuts. The most important thing to remember is to follow a validated cleaning procedure with approved cleaning and sanitizing chemistry and application rates.”

On the subject of chemistry, Goff says, “Long gone are the days of just rinsing down with water or just using a scrub soap. Detergents have been developed specifically for certain types of metal, equipment, soils, and tasks. We have an arsenal of detergents available for use and have learned that this only expedites the process to use the correct ones.”

Cleaning targets

Some processors might just focus on equipment as the primary target for their cleaning and sanitation program. While that’s still important, there are other areas to consider.

“The critical areas to focus on include processing equipment—especially ones with joints, seams, and gaskets—food contact surfaces, and floors, walls, and ceilings,” Quinty says. His colleague Andy Reichlin, national sales manager at ThermOmegaTech, adds, “Outside of areas where the end product is processed, we also need to clean loading docks and material handling spaces to ensure ingredients are not contaminated.”

Food inspection audit swabAn effective way for a food processor to avoid product recalls and pass inspections is to budget for high-level cleaning and sanitation tools and equipment.PSSI

Turning back to processing equipment, today’s sanitation programs have a deeper focus on ensuring every inch of a machine that comes in contact with food has been thoroughly cleaned. “Some overlooked areas that deserve more attention include equipment joints, corners, and intricate machinery parts, which can harbor contaminants if not adequately cleaned,” says Shawn Berg, business development engineer at Hydro-Thermal. “Additionally, ventilation systems and other non-direct contact surfaces may need to be addressed but can contribute to overall plant hygiene.”

Evolution of CIP and COP

Clean-in-place (CIP) and clean-out-of-place (COP) systems are both effective for precision cleaning the areas that Berg describes. Today’s CIP and COP systems have also evolved in recent years by incorporating new technology and automation, and addressing shifting workplace needs.

“We are seeing systems evolve to meet more strict standards both self-imposed by a plant or via a regulating body, while also achieving the efficient usage of energy, chemical, and time,” says James Bushard, regional sales manager for Pick Heaters. “These changes have come in several forms and include hygienic design consideration, material selection, increased need for automation and integration. Flexibility in the operation of systems and recording of data to track compliance is important as well.”

As for COP systems in particular, “more advanced technologies than traditional COP parts washers have evolved,” says Peter Barrie, product management director at Sani-Matic. “More facilities are realizing the benefits of automated cabinet washers and the further reduction in labor, utilities, and cleaning time they produce. A COP parts washer still has a lot of touch points of the part and room for error, while an automated cabinet washer is like a dishwasher at home: load it up, hit start, and go.”

Food processing clean out of placeClean-out-of-place (COP) parts washers are an effective way to wash and sanitize individual equipment pieces, while newer machines like automatic cabinet washers can cut the touchpoints down further, reducing labor and increasing efficiencies.Sani-Matic

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