Transcript Sushi
Sushi
- ready-to-eat cooked rice that has
been acidified with vinegar solutions
formed with raw or cooked fish and other
seafood, fresh chopped vegetables,
pickles, tofu, etc.
Sashimi
- thin slices or slabs of raw fish
that are presented ready-to-eat.
Pink
Meat
is rich, oily and
semi-soft texture
There are white fatty
bands- more white- more
salmon flavor
High in Omega 3 fatty
acids
100 gm = 20 gm protein,
12 gm fat, 180 calories
Ahi
Maguro
means Tuna
Tuna- also
known as Yellowfin
tuna-RUBY in color
Blue Fin Tuna (black
diamond tuna)- RED
in color
Healthiest choice
among sushi fish
4-oz = 120 calories,
1 gm fat, 27 gm
protein
Subtle flavor,
tender texture,
robust taste, firm
flesh, and minimal
fat
-‘White Tuna’ by Japan
-Pale in color
-Mild flavor
-Less firm then yellow
fin tuna
-High protein
-Low fat
-1oz serving: 7 gm
protein, 2gm of fat,
50 calories
Snake mackerel, not a tuna
Melt in your mouth oily texture
Known as Butterfish
Rich buttery taste
Slightly meatier than Ahi Tuna
Often misrepresented as
Albacore tuna, Atlantic cod, oil
fish, grouper and sea bass
Higher in fat
3.5 oz serving = 14 gm fat, 187
calories, 18 gm protein
Relative of Tuna, but not
Tuna
Amberjack, yellowtail
amberjack and yellowtail
Buttery and delicate
flavor
A fatty delicate fish raised
specifically for sushi and
sashimi in Japan.
“Affluent” fish
Relaxed, pampered
environment promotes a
fatty and delicate texture
Higher fat content and
improved quality if farmed
raised.
High in oil and protein
Bold, rich taste, earthy
Eaten cooked, not raw
Difficult to make- often
purchased prepared by
a Unagi chef.
Often eaten with sweet
basting eel sauce
In Japan- mythical
energizing powers and
aphrodisiac qualities
Distinct oily flavor
Delicate fish often
salt cured and rice
vinegar rinsed. Often
found pickled (Shime
Saba)
Difficult to work with
Considered one of the
healthier sushi fishhigh in omega 3 and
vitamin E.
1oz= 58 calories, 4 gm
fat, 5 gm protein
Hard to find delicacy
Firm, savory flavor
Is oily and salty like
Mackerel but texture
is more firm like
tuna.
Not a real Mackerelmore closely related
to Pompano or Jack
Fish
1 nigiri piece= 52
calories, 2.5 gm of
protein, and 1 gm fat
Fresh,
mild taste
Firmness similar to
ahi tuna
turgid flesh, is very
watery, and has a
delicate sweet
aroma
1 nigiri piece= 41
calories, 3.4 gm of
protein and fat is
negligible
Mild,
refreshing
flavor
Firm texturesimilar to Tai
A white fish
Reasonably priced
Shrimp
sushi (ebi)
Sea Scallops (hotategai)
Octopus sushi (tako)
Soft Shelled crab
Sweet Shrimp (amaebi)
Squid sushi (Ika)
Imitation crab
Smelt Roe- Red
Masago
Orange-Smelt
Roe- (Capelin
Fish) Orange
Tabiko- Flying Fish RoeOrange
Smelt Roe- Black
Ikura-Alaskan Salmon
Caviar
Wasabi
Pickled Ginger
PREPARATION
OF SUSHI TRADITIONALLY
OCCURS USING ROOM TEMPERATURE RICE.
COOLING RICE SLOWLY WHILE ADDING
VINEGAR ENHANCES FLAVOR AND ALLOWS
FOR THE NECESSARY CONSISTENCY TO
FORM THE SUSHI.
Acidification is only needed if the operator intends to
leave the rice at room temperature—which is
standard practice in making sushi
If rice will not be kept out of refrigeration, then the
rice should be cooled using Food Code cooling
parameter to 41ºFor kept above 135ºF
ACIDIFICATON of rice using vinegar, salt and sugar to
a pH of 4.1 but not to exceed 4.6. Various recipe
exist.
A pH meter or other effective testing devise shall be
used to determine is the pH is met for every batch
made
Conduct the pH test within 30 minutes after acidification of the cooked
rice and as often as necessary to assure a targeted pH of 4.1 and an
equilibrium pH of 4.6.
Make a rice slurry by gathering a 1/4 cup sample of the cooked, acidified
rice taken from various locations in the batch and add 3/4 cup of distilled
water in a clear plastic or metal blend cup. Blend the slurry for
approximately 20 seconds. Verify pH with a calibrated pH meter by
placing the meter in the liquid of the slurry.
If the target pH is 4.1, two buffers
for calibration should provide
readings of 4.0 and 7.0. If the pH
meter does not read the buffers
correctly, make the necessary
adjustment in the device according
to the manufacturer’s instructions
or replace the device
HACCP
A HACCP plan must be developed and followed if Rice
is being acidified
Must have SOPs in place for training, sanitation and
similar required pre-requisite programs
pH tests, letters of guarantee from suppliers shall be
available and kept at the production site
HACCP log sheets, acidification log sheet, corrective
action documentation.
Shellstock identification shall be maintained for 90
days
Parasite destruction guarantees or documentation90 day retention
Dedicated preparation area- time or space
No bare hand contact
Approved sources of ingredients
Parasitic Hazard Control*
Histamine producing fish* shall have
documentation provided from the supplier that
temperature control have been met from harvest
through delivery to prevent decomposition and
thus histamine production.
Cut
veggies should be refrigerated
Bamboo mats shall be wrapped in plastic
wrap and re-wrapped ever 4 hrs
Knives, cutting boards and other equipment
in contact with PHF foods- cleaned and
sanitized every 4 hours.
Consumer Advisory: must be provided
according to code for products with raw
animal foods.
Frozen & stored at -4°F or below- 7 days
Frozen to -31°F until solid & stored at -31°F or
below for at least 15 hours
Frozen to -31°F until solid & stored at -4°F or
below for at least 24 hours
EXEMPT:
Molluscan Shellfish
Scallops with only abductor muscle
Tuna spp- Fish and Fisheries Products Hazards and
Control Guidance (yellowfin, bluefin, Bigeye)
Aquacultured fish, such as Salmon that:
Open waters-raised in net pens or raised in land-based
operations (ponds, tanks) AND are fed formulated feed
that contains no live parasites that could infect fish
Some species of fish have been implicated in
histamine poisoning. These are scrombriod toxinforming species as defined in 21 CFR 123.3(m) as
meaning bluefish, mahi-mahi, tuna, and other
fish (not necessarily all in the Scrombriae family)
in which high levels of histamine can be
produced when exposed to elevated
temperatures.
Fish and Fisheries Products Hazards and Control
Guidance
http://www.fda.gov/food/guidancecompliancer
egulatoryinformation/guidancedocuments/seafo
od/fishandfisheriesproductshazardsandcontrolsgu
ide/default.htm
Labels
shall comply with 21 CFR Part 101 and
the Food Code if packaged.
Shelf life (date marking) if held for 24 hrs or
greater
Consumer Advisory on packaged products
JAPANESE CUISINE
AT ITS FINEST
AT
IS “NIATIMORI?”
Japanese tradition to fine dining
Female or male body presentation
Add a little sushi and other delectable
And what do you get?
Well-accepted-practiced
tradition in Japan;
Recognized as an art form in
Japan;
Part of the Geisha culture dating
back hundreds of years.
Based on: sushi is made to
delight the eyes and the palate.
Sushi making is an art form and
an artful presentation is goal.
What
are the public health requirements?
No contamination of RTE foods;
No bare ….contact with RTE foods;
Time as a Public Health Control
Single Use or multi-use utensils
Discard what is not consumed in 4/6 hours
Others?
http://www.sushiencyclopedia.com
http://www.sushinut.com/