Beginning June 20, 2016, all retail stores and official establishments that grind raw beef for sale must maintain records. The U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service, published a final rule in the Federal Register detailing this requirement. The goal of the new rule is to improve response time and identify the source of a foodborne illness outbreak involving ground beef.
The record keeping is required for all ground beef, including ground beef from trim and any raw beef that is ground at a customer’s individual request. For businesses that have more than one location, the revised rule indicates for records to be maintained at the individual establishment where the beef is ground and should not be moved to company headquarters. Records need to be kept for one year after the initial grinding.
The required records need to include the date and time of grinding; manufacturer name of source material used for product produced; supplier lot numbers, product code, and/or pack date of source material used; establishment number(s) of establishment providing source material; and date and time grinder and related food contact surfaces were last cleaned and sanitized (Table 1). A “lot” of ground beef is described as ground beef made from the same source materials documented from the time that the equipment was last cleaned to the next time the equipment is cleaned.
To read the rest of the story, please go to: Michigan State University Extension