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When the Supply Chain Fails: The Peach Recall and Why Every Certified Food Protection Manager Must Pay Attention
/0 Comments/in Certified Food Protection Manager, Safe Food Training MN/by Jeff WebsterAs a Minnesota food safety professional, my usual focus is on in-house standards like time/temperature and hygiene. However, the recent nationwide peach recalls—initially fresh peaches from HMC Farms and Moonlight Companies due to Listeria, followed by Kroger’s “Private Selection” peach salsa recall—demonstrate the critical need for a Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM) to manage external threats. The salsa recall was necessary because it was made with the contaminated peaches, illustrating the “continuing fallout” and the vital lessons in traceability and supplier-level risk for all Minnesota food managers.
1. The Initial Recall: A Problem at the Source
The first recall was for the raw, agricultural product—the fresh peaches. Listeria is a bacterium found in soil, water, and animal feces, meaning contamination can happen right on the farm or in the processing plant.
This presents an immediate challenge for you, whether you are a manager, chef, or business owner.
- You cannot see the threat: Listeria doesn’t change the smell, taste, or appearance of the food. A contaminated peach looks just like a safe peach. This is why we rely on food safety systems, not our senses.
- The supplier is your first line of defense: This incident underscores the importance of using approved, reputable suppliers. Even the best suppliers can experience a recall; they must have procedures to identify and notify you immediately.
Receiving is a critical control point: Your receiving dock is more than a doorway. It’s the first checkpoint in your kitchen’s safety plan. You must train your team to check for undamaged packaging, proper temperatures (when applicable), and to know who your suppliers are.
2. The "Recall Fallout" and Your Certified Food Protection Manager Training
The secondary recall of the peach salsa is, in many ways, the more important lesson for a Certified Food Protection Manager. The salsa company didn’t necessarily do anything wrong in its own kitchen, but a contaminated ingredient it received from a supplier affected it.
Ask yourself these questions:
- Do you have a traceability plan? If you received a recall notice today for “HMC Farms Peaches,” could you—within minutes—know if you had that product? Could you check whether you used that product in a batch of house-made chutney, a dessert special, or a salad?
- Are you tracking lot codes? For many managers, the box is broken down and the invoice filed away. Best practice during a high-risk event is to maintain traceability. This can mean having a simple log or even just clipping the lot code label from a case and attaching it to your invoice.
How Fast Can You Act? A recall is a race against the clock. Your role as a CFPM is to have a plan before you need it. This includes identifying the product, segregating it (labeling it “DO NOT USE”), and communicating with staff and, if necessary, the public and your local health department.
3. The Pathogen: Why Listeria is a Unique Threat
This recall involved Listeria, not E. coli or Salmonella. For a food professional, this distinction is critical, as Listeria has a terrifying “superpower.”
- It Grows in the Cold: This is the most important fact. Unlike most bacteria that are slowed by refrigeration, Listeria monocytogenes can continue to grow and multiply at refrigerated temperatures (40°F or below).
- The Risk in Ready-to-Eat (RTE) Foods: A manager might mistakenly believe a product is “safe” once it’s in the walk-in cooler. With Listeria, that cooler can become an incubator. This makes it uniquely dangerous for ready-to-eat foods that lack a “kill step” (i.e., cooking), such as fresh salsa, deli meats, soft cheeses, and sprouts.
- It is a zero-tolerance pathogen: Because Listeria is so dangerous, especially to high-risk populations, there is a “zero-tolerance” policy for it in ready-to-eat foods. A single cell is all it takes to render a food “adulterated.” This is why you see massive recalls from a potential contamination, not just a confirmed one.
These events are clear reminders that food safety isn’t just a poster on the wall; it’s an active, daily-managed system. And you lead that system.
Build Your Expertise with Safe Food Training
Recalls are real-world tests of your food safety systems. As a Certified Food Protection Manager, you lead the effort to protect public health and your business’s reputation.
If you or your team need the 8-hour food licensing certification or your three-year renewal, we offer friendly, personalized, and effective training tailored for Minnesota food professionals.
Don’t wait for a recall. Visit safefoodtraining.com to register and gain the skills to handle any food safety challenge.
Don’t Get Caught Off Guard: Check Your Minnesota Food Manager Certification Today
/0 Comments/in Certified Food Protection Manager/by Jeff Webster
In the fast-paced world of food service, it’s easy to let administrative deadlines slip. However, there’s one that every Minnesota food professional must keep top of mind: their three-year food manager certification renewal. This isn’t just a suggestion—it’s a state-mandated requirement critical to both legal compliance and public safety. Failing to renew your Minnesota food manager certification can have serious consequences for your career and your establishment.
Understanding Minnesota's Three-Year Renewal Rule
The state of Minnesota requires Certified Food Protection Managers (CFPMs) to renew their credentials every three years by completing approved continuing education. This regulation is in place for a crucial reason: the world of food safety is constantly evolving. New research on pathogens, updated best practices for handling allergens, and changes to the FDA Food Code mean that knowledge acquired three years ago may no longer be complete. The renewal process ensures that the person responsible for an establishment’s food safety is continually operating with the most current information.
- Your Legal Responsibility: As a CFPM, you are legally accountable for the safety of the food served. The CFPM training establishes this responsibility as a core principle. Allowing your certification to expire is a direct failure of this duty and can leave you and your business vulnerable during a health inspection. It’s a foundational part of your role as a kitchen leader.
- Protecting Public Health: The three-year cycle ensures a consistent, high standard of safety knowledge across the state. It acts as a critical safeguard, reducing the risk of foodborne illness outbreaks by keeping managers informed about emerging threats, such as new strains of bacteria or newly identified allergens, and providing updated prevention strategies.
Maintaining Your Professional Standing: A valid certification is a mark of professionalism. It signals to employers, staff, and customers that you are a dedicated and knowledgeable leader in the industry, committed to upholding the highest standards of excellence. It is often a prerequisite for promotion and can be a key differentiator when applying for new leadership positions.
The High Cost of a Lapsed Certification
Failing to renew your certification on time is more than a simple oversight; it can lead to significant, costly consequences that affect your entire operation. Health departments consider a lapse in the required certification for the person in charge to be a critical violation. The potential fallout extends far beyond a simple warning, creating a ripple effect of adverse outcomes.
- Fines and Penalties: A lapsed certification discovered during an inspection can cause substantial fines and penalties. Companies can easily avoid these financial penalties, which are an unnecessary operational cost, by planning proactively and renewing on time. You could use this money more effectively to invest in your staff, equipment, or ingredients.
- Operational Disruption: In some cases, a health inspector may require immediate correction of the issue, potentially disrupting service or leading to a temporary suspension of your license to operate until a certified manager arrives. Every hour of downtime costs you valuable revenue and inconveniences loyal customers.
- Reputational Damage: A failed inspection or public notice of a violation can cause lasting damage to your establishment’s reputation. In an era of online reviews and social media, news of a food safety compliance issue can spread rapidly, deterring customers long after the problem has been resolved. Rebuilding public trust can be a lengthy and challenging process.
Know someone who needs their initial certification? Send them the link to sign up today!
More Than a Requirement: The Value of Continuing Education
Viewing your CFPM renewal MN as just another box to check is a missed opportunity. Continuing education is a powerful tool for professional growth and operational excellence. It’s your chance to step away from the daily grind, refocus on the foundational principles that protect your customers, and learn about the latest advancements in the field. This commitment to lifelong learning is what separates good managers from great ones.
- Stay Current with the FDA Food Code: The Food Code is not a static document. Updates can include changes to cooking temperatures, new guidelines for managing major food allergens, or revised cleaning and sanitization procedures. Your continuing education ensures you are aware of and implementing these crucial changes, protecting your operation from unknowingly falling out of compliance.
- Reinforce Best Practices: The fast pace of a kitchen can sometimes lead to shortcuts. The renewal course serves as a vital refresher on complex topics like HACCP principles, active managerial control, and the specific science of foodborne pathogens. It reinforces the high standards learned in your initial certification, ensuring that best practices don’t erode over time under the pressure of a busy service.
- Boost Your Confidence: Renewing your Minnesota Food Manager Certification reaffirms your expertise and strengthens your leadership. You return to your team equipped with the most current knowledge, ready to train staff effectively and answer their questions with authority. This confidence is contagious and is essential for fostering a stronger food safety culture where every team member feels empowered and responsible.
Protect Your Customers and Your Business

Sign up for the next available Certified Food Protection Manager course near you.
Fall Food Safety: Beyond the Pumpkin Spice
/0 Comments/in Certified Food Protection Manager/by Jeff WebsterAs a Minnesota food professional, you know autumn brings a welcome change to our menus, featuring hearty squashes, crisp apples, and rich pumpkins. But let’s be honest, autumn’s culinary delights extend far beyond pumpkin spice lattes! While these ingredients are crowd-pleasers, they also introduce unique food safety challenges. Ensuring proper seasonal food safety from the moment ingredients arrive to the final dish is critical for protecting your customers and your reputation.
Proper Handling Starts at the Door
The first step in ensuring fall menu safety is to manage your seasonal produce deliveries with a critical eye. Fresh ingredients, such as pumpkins and squash, often arrive with soil and other debris from the field, which can carry harmful bacteria like Listeria and E. coli. A rushed receiving process that fails to catch these issues can introduce dangerous contaminants directly into your kitchen’s clean environment.
- Inspect every delivery: Your Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM) training emphasizes that the flow of food begins at the point of receiving. You must thoroughly inspect seasonal produce for signs of spoilage, mold, or physical damage. A bruised apple or soft-skinned squash can harbor bacteria that will spread quickly, and you have the right and responsibility to reject any products that don’t meet your standards.
- Prioritize storage: Root vegetables and hard squashes have different storage needs than delicate greens. They thrive in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight. It’s equally important to store them away from ready-to-eat foods to prevent cross-contamination. Storing raw squash below uncovered salads, for example, could allow field contaminants to fall onto food that will receive no further cooking.
- Implement first-in, first-out (FIFO): It’s a basic but crucial rule that prevents waste and mitigates risk. Your team should properly date and rotate stock so they use older seasonal ingredients before new deliveries arrive. This simple process minimizes the risk of spoilage and mold growth, which can produce harmful mycotoxins even after cooking.
The Science of Washing and Preparation
Once inside, the beautiful harvest produce requires careful handling. The CFPM course covers the science of microbial growth, teaching us that a simple rinse is one of the most effective ways of removing physical and biological contaminants. Many people mistakenly believe that produce with a thick rind, such as butternut squash, which they plan to peel, doesn’t need washing. In reality, skipping this step allows a knife to transfer pathogens from the skin of a squash to the cutting board and interior flesh.
- Wash Before You Cut: Always wash produce thoroughly under running water before peeling or cutting it. This crucial step prevents surface contaminants from being transferred by the knife to the edible portions of the food. It’s a simple action that breaks a primary chain of contamination.
- Scrub Firm Surfaces: For firm-skinned produce like butternut squash or pumpkins, use a clean and sanitized vegetable brush to scrub the surface. This physical action dislodges stubborn, caked-on dirt and significantly reduces the microbial load, a key concept in preventing foodborne illness.
- Sanitize Your Surfaces: After prepping raw produce, always follow the two-step process of cleaning and then sanitizing the cutting boards, knives, and prep areas. Cleaning removes food debris, but only a proper sanitizer will reduce pathogens to a safe level. This practice, stressed heavily in certification training, is essential to prevent cross-contamination.
Ready to renew? Check out our upcoming courses or sign up for online recertification today!
Mastering Hot Soups and Beverages

- Maintain the Hot Zone: The “danger zone” for food is between 41°F and 135°F, the ideal range where bacteria can double in as little as 20 minutes. Training teaches you to keep hot TCS foods at 135°F or higher. Use calibrated food thermometers and monitor your holding equipment frequently, as a malfunctioning steam table can pose a serious food safety risk.
- Reheat Correctly: Bring a batch of soup to 165°F and maintain it at this temperature for 15 seconds within a two-hour period when reheating it for hot holding. Simply warming it up is not sufficient and creates a hazardous situation.
- Cool Foods Rapidly: One of the biggest risks in a professional kitchen is improper cooling. Cool leftover soup or cider from 135°F to 70°F within two hours, and then from 70°F to 41°F or lower in the next four hours. Use approved methods, such as ice baths, ice paddles, or dividing hot liquids into shallow metal pans, to facilitate rapid cooling.
- Document Your Process: A key part of a food safety management system is documentation. Keep temperature logs for both your hot-held items and your cooling procedures. This not only ensures that you are consistently practicing safe seasonal food handling practices but also provides critical evidence of your diligence during a health inspection.
Protect Your Customers and Your Business
Vigilant handling of fall ingredients is a non-negotiable part of your professional responsibility. Applying these principles shows a commitment to excellence and public health. Ensure you and your team are fully prepared to handle seasonal challenges by maintaining your food safety credentials.
Sign up for the next available Certified Food Protection Manager course near you.
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