Manual of Naval Preventive Medicine
Chapter 1: Food Service Sanitation
Section III: Sanitary Requirements and Controls for Milk and Milk Products
1-21. Storage and Serving.
Department of the Navy
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
1. Single-service containers of milk and liquid milk products must be refrigerated at temperatures of 40 degrees F or below until served. The tops of the
containers will be clean and must not be submerged in water or covered with ice for cooling purposes. All milk and milk products dispensed from bulk milk dispensers must be homogenized. Temperature in the dispenser cabinet must be maintained within the range of 32 to 40 degrees F. A nonmercury thermometer is an integral part of the dispensing cabinet. See MIL-STD-175.
2. Multiuse dispenser tubes are prohibited. Single service tubes
(other than precut tubes) must be cut with a sanitized cutting
instrument at a point l/4 inch below the termination of the
dispensing mechanism.
3. Food-contact (milk-contact) surfaces must not be exposed to
manual contact, droplet contamination, dust, flies, or other sources
of contamination.
4. Dispenser cabinets must be defrosted at frequent intervals to
prevent formation of ice deposits.
5. When the pitcher method of recombining and dispensing milk is
used, care must be taken to ensure that pitchers have been cleaned
and sanitized prior to use. Long-handled, corrosion-resistant spoons
or electric beaters, used for reconstituting the milk, must be
cleaned and sanitized prior to use. Only cool potable water will be
used for reconstitution. Reconstituted milk left at the end of a meal
period will be used for cooking purposes or will be discarded.
6. The use of pitchers for dispensing milk may be approved by the
medical officer (unit surgeon in the case of the Marine Corps) or his
designated representative for use in small, private messes using
"family style service" provided the following standards are adhered
to:
a. Milk will only be dispensed from corrosion
resistant stainless steel or glass pitchers which are washed and
sanitized between each use.
b. Milk remaining in the pitcher at the end of a meal period must
be discarded.
Approved for public release; Distribution is unlimited.
The listing of any non-Federal product in this CD is not an
endorsement of the product itself, but simply an acknowledgement of the source.
Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
2300 E Street NW
Washington, D.C
20372-5300 |
Operational Medicine
Health Care in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMED P-5139
January 1, 2001 |
United States Special Operations Command
7701 Tampa Point Blvd.
MacDill AFB, Florida
33621-5323 |
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