Processing aids are materials that can be added to foods during manufacture to achieve specific targets. A great example is material added to wine to clarify it (remove cloudiness), it is then removed prior to the bottling step. Only processing aids that are approved for use by the Food Standards Code may be used.
The following is from the latest Emerging Issues newsletter from Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ);
FSANZ has invited submissions on an application for a processing aid to reduce the risk of the food poisoning bacteria Listeria.
FSANZ Chief Executive Officer, Steve McCutcheon, said EBI Food Safety Ltd had applied for permission to use a bacteriophage preparation called P100 as a processing aid for ready-to-eat foods to reduce levels of Listeria monocytogenes.
“Processing aids can’t legally be used in food production without a rigorous safety assessment by FSANZ,” Mr McCutcheon said.
Bacteriophages are the most abundant biological entities on earth. They infect bacteria and multiply inside them until the bacteria breaks down. They are naturally present in high numbers in the environment , in saltwater, freshwater, soil, plants and animals (including people) and food .
Bacteriophages infect very specific strains of bacteria so the P100 bacteriophage would not infect any other bacteria except Listeria.They are harmless to plants, animals or humans and do not alter the properties of food, disintegrating into natural compounds such as amino acids.
Listeria bacteria can cause disease called listeriosis. They are common in the environment and may contaminate many different types of foods from the farm right through to the retail market.
While Listeria has little impact on healthy people, it can cause severe illness in people with reduced immune systems such as pregnant women and their babies, young children, cancer patients, people with HIV/AIDS, and the elderly.
Currently, the Food Standards Code permits no tolerance of Listeria monocytogenesin several foods.
The use of bacteriophage preparations to treat food has been approved by the United States, Canada and the Netherlands.
Mr McCutcheon said that there would be a second round of public comment later in the application process before a recommendation on the application to the FSANZ Board.
Submissions on the consultation document are invited from consumers, the food industry and jurisdictions on the recommended approach contained in the proposal and its impacts. The period for submissions closes on 1 November 2011