Software solutions save the day

Cheesemaker Tillamook of Oregon wanted to avoid product recall problems. Fruit packer Pri-Psagot of Israel needed accurate data tracking. Both devised software solutions.

An operator checks the master recipe on the InTouch cheese Make Sheet screen for cooking a milk batch.
An operator checks the master recipe on the InTouch cheese Make Sheet screen for cooking a milk batch.

When you’ve been making quality cheese and other dairy products for more than a hundred years, you don’t want to ruin the entire franchise with a botched product recall. That’s what managers at the Tillamook County Creamery Association had on their minds recently, when they decided to replace their paper-based tracking system with a modern computer-based system.

Peter McIntosh, a Canadian cheesemaker, and T.S. Townsend, a local butter maker, established the first commercial cheese factory in Tillamook County, OR, in 1894. Actually, they built the factory on work begun in 1854 when several area farmers banded together to build a two-masted schooner to transport butter to Portland. A picture of the ship remains on Tillamook product labels. And McIntosh’s recipe for cheese is also still used.

Beginning with a cooperative of ten operating cheese factories in 1909, the Tillamook County Creamery Association was formed to control cheese quality. By 1968 all cheese factories in the county became part of the farmer-owned cooperative. Today the 150-member association employs more than 470 and produces eight varieties of Cheddar cheese, along with several other cheeses, butter, ice cream, sour cream, yogurt, fluid milk and dried whey.

As management looked for a computer-based tracking system to replace its paper-based version, maintaining top product quality was a high priority. “We were looking for a process control and monitoring system that would both document our process and allow us to look into that process from any point in the plant,” says James McMullen, senior vice president and chief operating officer. “We sought a good operator interface system that could give us a single view into any of the multiple process steps we use, and we wanted a statistical process control (SPC) package that would allow operators to maintain tight control over the cheese-making process.”

Not being shy about requirements for a new system, McMullen adds, “We also wanted better inventory control so that we could track the process throughout the plant and document it on a real-time basis. In addition, we wanted complete traceability of product ingredients and genealogy of all finished products. The work-in-process (WIP) tracking system had to be able to seamlessly handle both batch tracking of bulk product and discrete tracking of individual packaged goods. We felt we needed this high level of capability because, although we had never had to do a product recall, one of our primary goals was to create a system whereby we could handle any potential recall in a prompt and efficient manner.”

Performance means quality

Tillamook turned to an Albany, OR-based systems integrator that specializes in implementation of software systems based on products from Wonderware, a Lake Forest, CA, business unit of London-based Invensys. Senior Systems Engineer Jeff Baxter, of Progressive Software Solutions, recalls that Tillamook’s first concern was the ability to handle potential product recalls. “They really measure performance in terms of quality at Tillamook,” Baxter observes.

In pitching a product-tracking solution that could handle the recall situation, Progressive proposed starting with the packaging area. In the hard cheese process, milk goes through a bacteriology process in a machine that Tillamook calls the “Cheddarmaster,” and comes out as a 40-pound block. “We started tracking when the block of cheese was ‘put through the wall’ from the manufacturing process room to the aging room. A bar code label was applied in order to track the block through the aging process and on into finished goods packaging,” says Baxter.

The system was designed from the beginning to allow for expansion. Baxter reports implementation was straightforward, with training on the new systems following the typical learning curve. Not long after implementation of the cheese block tracking part of the project, Tillamook began to see direct value, through improved stability of its inventory levels—both WIP and raw materials. Prior to the system’s launch, inventory levels “fluctuated significantly,” says Baxter. The improved stability improved planning.

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