Literature DB >> 29474147

Precooking as a Control for Histamine Formation during the Processing of Tuna: An Industrial Process Validation.

Farzana Adams1, Fred Nolte2, James Colton3, John De Beer4, Lisa Weddig5.   

Abstract

An experiment to validate the precooking of tuna as a control for histamine formation was carried out at a commercial tuna factory in Fiji. Albacore tuna ( Thunnus alalunga) were brought on board long-line catcher vessels alive, immediately chilled but never frozen, and delivered to an on-shore facility within 3 to 13 days. These fish were then allowed to spoil at 25 to 30°C for 21 to 25 h to induce high levels of histamine (>50 ppm), as a simulation of "worst-case" postharvest conditions, and subsequently frozen. These spoiled fish later were thawed normally and then precooked at a commercial tuna processing facility to a target maximum core temperature of 60°C. These tuna were then held at ambient temperatures of 19 to 37°C for up to 30 h, and samples were collected every 6 h for histamine analysis. After precooking, no further histamine formation was observed for 12 to 18 h, indicating that a conservative minimum core temperature of 60°C pauses subsequent histamine formation for 12 to 18 h. Using the maximum core temperature of 60°C provided a challenge study to validate a recommended minimum core temperature of 60°C, and 12 to 18 h was sufficient to convert precooked tuna into frozen loins or canned tuna. This industrial-scale process validation study provides support at a high confidence level for the preventive histamine control associated with precooking. This study was conducted with tuna deliberately allowed to spoil to induce high concentrations of histamine and histamine-forming capacity and to fail standard organoleptic evaluations, and the critical limits for precooking were validated. Thus, these limits can be used in a hazard analysis critical control point plan in which precooking is identified as a critical control point.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Challenge study; End point internal product temperature (EPIPT); Histamine; Precooking; Tuna; Validation

Year:  2018        PMID: 29474147     DOI: 10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-17-276

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Food Prot        ISSN: 0362-028X            Impact factor:   2.077


  1 in total

1.  Detection of Histamine Based on Gold Nanoparticles with Dual Sensor System of Colorimetric and Fluorescence.

Authors:  Jingran Bi; Chuan Tian; Gong-Liang Zhang; Hongshun Hao; Hong-Man Hou
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2020-03-09
  1 in total

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