Extraneous Matters in Food
Extraneous Matters in Food
Extraneous Matters in Food
Definition
Any foreign substances present in foods that are associated with objectionable conditions or
practices in production, storage, or distribution of foods are called extraneous
According to Food Safety Management, a foreign object is “Any extraneous material in food
not intended to be there or be consumed, e.g., field matter (stones, wood, metal) even if a part
of the food itself (e.g., bone, shell, pits, stems, etc.); unintentional processing residues (glass,
metal fragments, plastic, personal objects, etc.); intentional contamination (e.g., employee
deliberate destruction); miscellaneous particulates and fragments.”
Classification of extraneous matters
Extraneous materials include:
1. Filth or objectionable matter contributed by animal contamination (rodent, insect, or bird
matter) or unsanitary conditions;
2. Decomposed material or decayed tissues due to parasitic or nonparasitic causes; and
3. Miscellaneous matter (sand, soil, glass, rust, or other foreign substances).
Analysis for extraneous matter (or solid impurities) is important both in selecting of raw
material for food manufacturing and in monitoring the quality of processed foods. The
presence of extraneous material in food products is unpleasant and can cause a serious health
hazard to the consumer. The main reason for carrying out analyses for extraneous matter in food
is to ensure the protection of consumers from harmful or filthy food products. The analysis
of extraneous matters gives information about food preparation, conservation and
distribution too.
2
Extraneous Matters in Foods
3
Extraneous Matters in Foods
Whole wheat grain: Straw, stones, foreign seeds, husk, mud particles, metallic particles,
other dals, plastic fibers, dead insects, rodents excreta, insect excreta, insect dirt, dye
stuff, iron fragments, machinery pins, parts, vegetables fibers, paint chips, jute fiber, birds
feather etc.
Nuts: Stones, foreign seeds, husk, mud particles, metallic particles, jute fibers, plastic
fibers, dead insects, insects parts, rodents excreta, insect excreta, insect dirt, dye stuff, iron
fragments, machinery pins, parts, vegetables fibers, paint chips, birds feather etc.
Oil seeds: Dry plant parts, stones, foreign seeds, husk, mud particles, metallic particles,
jute fibers, plastic fibers, dead insects, insects parts, rodents excreta, insect excreta, insect
dirt, dye stuff, iron fragments, machinery pins, parts, vegetables fibers, paint chips, birds
feather etc.
4
Extraneous Matters in Foods
Methods of detecting extraneous matters in foods. While the specifics will depend greatly on the
product, a wide range of controls can be customized to effectively control some of the risks of most
processes. The common methods of foreign material identification and removal are as follows:
5
Extraneous Matters in Foods
5. Density/ or I. Sedimentation in Stones and metallic parts in cereals, Dust may be spread and
buoyancy liquids nuts oil seeds, grass, filth, husk, recontamination
II. Sedimentation Stones and sand, husk, leaves, dried
inair (aspiration) light filth in cereals, oilseeds, pulses May occur
III. Floatation
6. Solubility Filtration Clarification of oils brines, milk, fruit Few food are Clearly liquids
juice
7. Magnetic Magnetic separators Ferromagnetic materials removed Non-ferromagnetic
properties materials remains
8. Electrical Metal detector Metals and other various materials Some foods also conduct
properties exhibiting electrical properties. electricity
9. Soaps and Solubility in Removal of adhered dirt, spray Effluent disposal problem
detergent detergent and its residue
solution
6
Extraneous Matters in Foods
10. Response to X- Opacity to X-ray Solder, plastic, and wood removed Health hazards
ray cabinet from food
11. Microscopic Microscopic Insect, hair, excreta, mold, fiber, Only small sample can be
appearance examination starch examined
12. Optical Refractive index Examination of glass used in bottling of Expensive
properties and food, internal blemishes identified in
optical density some fruit
13. Chemical Chemical analysis of Test of contaminants; i.e. heavy Time consuming
properties food metals, color, preservatives, additives
adulteration etc.
7
Extraneous Matters in Foods
All programs indented towards detecting extraneous matters in foods include the following
main components:
1. Use of detection devices
These devices remove or limit the amount of foreign matter in a food product, which may
include magnets, sifters, filters, strainers, metal detectors, X-rays, and destoner units.
2. Follow-up on findings
If foreign matter is discovered in a product, it should not only be removed or neutralized,
but also investigated. Identify the source of the contamination and resolve the issue that
caused it.
3. Monitoring of trends
Foreign matter and relevant investigations of it should be documented and reviewed
periodically to look for possible trends associated with incidents.
4. Education and training
Employees should be educated on the importance of the control program. Those
employees who are responsible for monitoring a foreign material device should receive
proper training. These training programs should occur at least once a year and should
include a review of each device, the procedures it is involved in, proper documentation, and
what to do in case of foreign matter detection.
8
Extraneous Matters in Foods
10
Extraneous Matters in Foods
11