TURKEY, BREAST, COOKED, DELI-STYLE, FROZEN Date: April 2009 Code: A549 PRODUCT DESCRIPTION Deli turkey breast is produced from young ready-to-cook turkeys, containing no more that 10% added ingredients, which include water, salt, sugar, binders and phosphates.
Food Safety Information United States Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service www.fsis.usda.gov Turkey Basics: Handling Cooked Dinners Take-out Dinners Hot from the Oven Eating Within 2 hours?
MAIL TO: Home Market Foods, Inc. CMS Dept #36669, 1 Fawcett Drive, Del Rio, TX 78840 on any bag of Cooked Perfect meatballs EXPIRES 2/28/11 Celebrate the season with the perfect holiday appetizer! ...
NUTRITION FACTS Serving size: ½ cup (80g) cooked onion drained and chopped Amount Per Serving Calories 30 Calories from Fat 0 % Daily Value* Total Fat 0g 0% Saturated Fat 0g 0% Trans Fat 0g Cholesterol 0mg 0% Sodium 0mg 0% Total Carbohydrate 7g 2% Dietary Fiber 1g 4% Sugars 3g ...
IMPS 500--CURED, CURED AND SMOKED, AND 3 EFFECTIVE DATE: JANUARY 1992 FULLY-COOKED PORK PRODUCTS INSTITUTIONAL MEAT PURCHASE SPECIFICATIONS FOR CURED, CURED AND SMOKED, AND FULLY-COOKED PORK PRODUCTS SERIES 500 The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) through its Agricultural Marketing ...
Cooked Headless IQF Shell-on Shrimp Cooked – Ready to Eat Product 11 Cooked Headless Shell-on IQF Cooked Shrimp in Reduced Oxygen Package Process Flow Chart
Cooked Greens Health and Learning success Go Hand-In-Hand School meals are designed to provide the nutrition students need to be healthy and ready to learn!
Loeffel Meat Laboratory [Est.5658/P5658]. University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583-0908, HACCP PLAN - G Fully Cooked, Not-Shelf Stable Fermented. 1 Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point ...
HACCP Plan – Fully cooked, not shelf-stable; Pasties . Product Description . COMMON NAME: Pasties . HOW IS IT TO BE USED? Cooked by consumer (but considered
6 Science & Technology Review July 1995 CCORDING to a common, rather simplistic notion, we are what we eat. On a far more empirical level, epidemiological studies reveal a connection between diet and adverse health consequences.