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

Author:

Adams Farzana1,Nolte Fred2,Colton James3,De Beer John4,Weddig Lisa5

Affiliation:

1. 28 Langdale Court, Huntington, Hamilton 3210 New Zealand

2. Fred Nolte Consulting, 2503 West 5th Avenue, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6K 1S9

3. Aerojet Rocketdyne, 8900 De Soto Avenue, Canoga Park, California 91304, USA

4. Chicken of the Sea International, 2150 East Grand Avenue, El Segundo, California 90245, USA

5. National Fisheries Institute, 7918 Jones Branch Drive, #700, McLean, Virginia 22102, USA

Abstract

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.

Publisher

International Association for Food Protection

Subject

Microbiology,Food Science

Reference44 articles.

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4. Effect of thermal treatment on moisture transport during transport during steam cooking of skipjack tuna;Bell;J. Food Sci,2001

5. Thermal death times of Hafnia alvei cells in a model suspension and in artificially contaminated hot-smoked kahawai (Arripis trutta);Bremer;J. Food Prot,1998

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