Now that you’ve established your Critical Control Points and Critical Limits for every preparation process and every menu item in your restaurant, it’s time to monitor. Limits and CCPs don’t do any good if there’s no enforcement. The first thing to establish is someone who will accept responsibility for monitoring. If no one must answer directly for monitoring, then no one will actively enforce the managerial control points you have taken so much time to identify up to this point.
Of course you may want to have different people monitoring different CCPs. Regardless of who takes responsibility, proper training is an absolute must. Training ensures monitoring processes are carried out accurately and effectively. Every CCP monitor should understand the following:
The CCP, Critical Limit, and the procedures on when, how, and where to monitor should all be written down in clear procedures that the person in charge of monitoring has read and signed. This helps prevent confusion and assigns official responsibility, which is particularly useful in case of problems down the road.
An example set of guidelines for a specific menu item might proceed as follows:
Assigned to Process 2. Note that this restaurant cooks once then immediately serves this menu item; if the chicken was cooked then held in cold storage until the next day before serving, it would be a Process 3 menu item.
Identified Prerequisite Program Controls:
Identified CCPs:
The Critical Limits Are:
Note this particular restaurant serves their Chicken Parmesan immediately, thus using time as a way to control the return of bacterial growth. If the restaurant did not plan on serving the chicken immediately, then a hot holding Critical Limit of 135 degrees Fahrenheit would need to be in place.
Someone in your restaurant needs to be trained and accept responsibility for monitoring the chicken breast while it cooks and ensure that it is regularly hitting 165 degrees Fahrenheit for 15 seconds. It is up to you to establish the guidelines for the frequency of the monitoring. The restaurant in this example tests one chicken breast in the beginning of the dinner shift, one in the middle, and one at the end of the rush to ensure temperature Critical Limits are being met. Consult with your local Board of Health while you are developing your own guidelines.