A Canadian firm is recalling a lot of breaded chicken strips due to the potential presence of Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin. The product was recalled after a consumer. The recall was triggered due to a consumer complaint.
Staphylococcus enterotoxin is a heat stable toxin that is formed as the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus grows in the food when that food is temperature abused. In this case, it could have grown in the batter as the product was made, or on the breaded strips if those strips were temperature abused. With one complaint at this point, it is more likely the latter. This could be a case where the consumer leaves the box of chicken strips on the counter for a long period of time, perhaps when defrosting them, and then cooks them. In this case, the organism grows on the strips and produces toxin. Because the strips have been par-fried (to set the coating), there is a little microbial competition present.
If more cases are reported from a diverse area, this would more likely indicate a production issue. In this case, the batter temperature was not properly controlled. For the facility, they would want to demonstrate proper batter temperature throughout the production run, adequate cooling and freezing after the par-cooking step, and then proper temperature control through the shipment of that product.
NET News Ledger.com
http://www.netnewsledger.com/2017/11/02/food-recall-maple-leaf-chicken-breast-strips/
Food Recall – Maple Leaf Chicken Breast Strips
Posted 2 November 2017 by NetNewsLedger in Featured