Adulteration
The addition of inferior or harmful substances to food products for fraudulent purposes, such as diluting expensive ingredients with cheaper fillers or contaminants.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Food Fraud and Integrity
Leading with Science. Ensuring Food Safety.
Explore a structured glossary of food safety terms and definitions used across food hygiene, HACCP, FSMS, microbiology, food law, labelling, traceability, auditing and compliance in South Africa.
The addition of inferior or harmful substances to food products for fraudulent purposes, such as diluting expensive ingredients with cheaper fillers or contaminants.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Food Fraud and Integrity
A substance that triggers an allergic reaction in sensitive individuals, commonly found in foods like peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, eggs, milk, wheat, and soy.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Allergen Management
Procedures and practices implemented to prevent cross-contact and contamination of food products with allergenic ingredients, including segregation, labelling, and sanitation measures.
Reference: Food safety programme
Topic: Allergen Management
The surrounding environmental temperature. In food safety, maintaining proper temperature controls is essential to prevent bacterial growth.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Temperature Control
The ability of microorganisms to resist the effects of antimicrobial agents, such as antibiotics, due to genetic mutations or acquired resistance mechanisms, posing a significant threat to public health.
Reference: Public health and food safety
Topic: Microbiology
A vendor that meets regulatory and food safety standards for sourcing ingredients or products. Businesses should ensure suppliers comply with relevant legal and food safety requirements.
Reference: Procurement and approval
Topic: Supplier Management
A systematic review to verify compliance with food safety regulations, standards and internal requirements, such as ISO 22000, HACCP or hygiene legislation.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Auditing and Compliance
A measure of the water available in food for microbial growth. Foods with low water activity are generally less prone to bacterial contamination and spoilage.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
The presence of harmful bacteria in food that can cause foodborne illnesses. Example: Salmonella in raw poultry.
Reference: Food contamination
Topic: Microbiology
A practicable and necessary method for the protection of food against contamination or spoilage, taking account of local conditions, established practice and practical implementation considerations.
Reference: Regulatory concept
Topic: Compliance and Hygiene
The date until which food retains its best quality. Unlike an expiration or use-by date, food may still be safe to consume after this date if stored properly.
Reference: Food labelling term
Topic: Labelling and Shelf Life
A risk to food safety caused by bacteria, viruses, parasites or fungi. Example: Listeria monocytogenes in soft cheeses.
Reference: HACCP term
Topic: Hazard Analysis
Measures implemented to prevent the introduction and spread of infectious diseases in agricultural and food production systems, including hygiene protocols, quarantine procedures and restricted access controls.
Reference: Preventive control
Topic: Agriculture and Public Health
A severe foodborne illness caused by Clostridium botulinum, often linked to improperly canned foods and anaerobic conditions.
Reference: Foodborne disease
Topic: Microbiology
A controlled area in food processing used to separate raw and ready-to-eat foods, minimising cross-contamination risks.
Reference: Facility control
Topic: Zoning and Segregation
The storage of large quantities of food ingredients or products requiring strict adherence to hygiene, stock rotation, pest control and environmental management measures.
Reference: Storage term
Topic: Storage and Warehousing
The process of verifying that measuring instruments, such as thermometers or pH meters, provide accurate readings.
Reference: Equipment control
Topic: Monitoring and Verification
A bacterial pathogen causing foodborne illness, often found in raw poultry and unpasteurised milk.
Reference: Pathogen
Topic: Microbiology
The assessment of meat post-slaughter to ensure it is free from disease and unacceptable contamination.
Reference: Meat inspection term
Topic: Meat Safety
A step in food production where control is essential to prevent, eliminate or reduce a food safety hazard to an acceptable level.
Reference: HACCP term
Topic: HACCP
A certificate issued in terms of applicable hygiene regulations indicating that a food premises has met relevant hygiene and legal requirements.
Reference: Legal compliance term
Topic: Compliance and Hygiene
Free of soil, food residues, dust, dirt, grease, impurities or other objectionable matter to the extent that a hygienic state is achieved.
Reference: Hygiene term
Topic: Cleaning and Sanitation
The presence of harmful chemicals such as pesticides, cleaning agents or residues in food. Example: detergent residue contaminating food contact surfaces.
Reference: Hazard type
Topic: Food Contamination
The process of lowering food temperature to slow bacterial growth and maintain food safety and quality.
Reference: Cold chain term
Topic: Temperature Control
Any representation which states, suggests or implies that a food has particular characteristics relating to origin, nutritional properties, nature, production, processing, composition or another quality.
Reference: Food labelling term
Topic: Labelling and Claims
The adherence to laws, regulations, standards and guidelines governing food safety, food quality, labelling and manufacturing practices.
Reference: General business term
Topic: Compliance and Governance
Anything in which or with which food is manufactured, prepared, processed, stored, served, displayed, packed, wrapped, kept or transported and with which food is in direct contact.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Food Contact Materials
The effect of a biological or chemical agent, foreign matter or other substance in food such that the food may fail legal requirements or become unfit for human consumption.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Food Contamination
The temperature reading taken in the estimated centre of the food product.
Reference: Monitoring term
Topic: Temperature Control
The maximum or minimum value to which a biological, chemical or physical parameter must be controlled at a critical control point.
Reference: HACCP term
Topic: HACCP
The process by which contaminants, allergens or microorganisms are unintentionally transferred from one food, surface, object or facility to another.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Food Contamination
The process of removing harmful microorganisms, chemicals or foreign matter from food or surfaces.
Reference: Control measure
Topic: Cleaning and Sanitation
A cleaning agent used to remove grease, dirt and food residues from surfaces. It is normally followed by sanitisation in food environments.
Reference: Cleaning term
Topic: Cleaning and Sanitation
The process of killing or reducing pathogenic microorganisms on surfaces using chemicals or heat.
Reference: Sanitation term
Topic: Cleaning and Sanitation
A term covering both best before and use-by dates, indicating how long food retains intended quality and safety.
Reference: Shelf life term
Topic: Labelling and Shelf Life
The time required at a specific temperature to reduce a microbial population by 90 percent, commonly used in thermal processing validation.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Thermal Processing
A bacterium found in the intestines of animals and humans. Some strains can cause severe foodborne illness.
Reference: Pathogen
Topic: Microbiology
A digital system that tracks food products from production to sale, supporting traceability, recall capability and compliance.
Reference: Digital compliance tool
Topic: Traceability
Laboratory analysis conducted on finished food products to assess safety, quality, nutritional content or compliance before distribution.
Reference: Quality control term
Topic: Testing and Verification
A protein that speeds up chemical reactions in food, affecting spoilage, ripening, processing and digestion.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Food Science
Environmental factors outside the food itself, such as temperature, humidity and surrounding atmosphere, that affect microbial growth.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
An apparatus, appliance, implement, storage space, working surface or object used in connection with the handling of food.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Food Premises and Equipment
A stock rotation system ensuring older food items are used before newer ones, helping prevent spoilage and unnecessary waste.
Reference: Inventory control
Topic: Storage and Stock Control
A substance added to food to improve taste, texture, appearance or shelf life, such as preservatives, colourants, flavourings or emulsifiers.
Reference: Food science term
Topic: Food Composition
Illness caused by consuming contaminated food, including bacterial, viral and parasitic infections.
Reference: Public health term
Topic: Foodborne Illness
A disease-causing microbe that contaminates food and leads to foodborne illness when consumed.
Reference: Pathogen
Topic: Microbiology
Any surface that comes into direct contact with food during production, processing, packaging or handling.
Reference: Hygiene term
Topic: Food Contact Materials
A harmful chemical, microorganism or physical material present in food that can cause illness, injury or product non-compliance.
Reference: General food safety term
Topic: Food Contamination
Efforts to prevent intentional contamination of food products by biological, chemical, physical or radiological hazards introduced to cause harm.
Reference: Intentional contamination
Topic: Food Defence and Fraud
The intentional misrepresentation, substitution, dilution or adulteration of food for economic gain.
Reference: Food integrity term
Topic: Food Defence and Fraud
A person who directly handles food, food equipment, utensils or food contact surfaces in the course of normal work and is expected to comply with food hygiene requirements.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: People and Responsibilities
The conditions and measures necessary to ensure the safety and suitability of food at all stages of the food chain.
Reference: Core food safety term
Topic: General Hygiene
A building, structure, stall, vehicle or similar place used for or in connection with the handling of food.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Food Premises and Equipment
The process of removing unsafe or non-compliant food from distribution, sale or use.
Reference: Incident management term
Topic: Recall and Traceability
The assurance that food will not cause harm to the consumer when prepared or consumed according to its intended use.
Reference: Core food safety term
Topic: Core Concepts
A systematic approach to managing food safety hazards within a food business through policies, procedures, monitoring and control measures.
Reference: FSMS term
Topic: Food Safety Management Systems
A certification and assurance framework supporting good agricultural practices for food safety, sustainability and worker health.
Reference: Agricultural standard
Topic: Standards and Certification
Guidelines and practices implemented in agricultural production to minimise the risk of contamination, unsafe chemical residues and other hazards.
Reference: Best practice term
Topic: Agriculture and Primary Production
Procedures and conditions that ensure food is produced under sanitary conditions and support safe food handling.
Reference: Prerequisite programme
Topic: General Hygiene
Methods of manufacture or handling that follow hygienic principles so food cannot be contaminated or spoiled during production.
Reference: Core GMP term
Topic: Good Manufacturing Practices
The different stages of bacterial multiplication, including lag, exponential, stationary and death phases.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
In hygiene contexts, this may include the forearm or the part of the arm extending from the wrist to the elbow.
Reference: Regulatory hygiene term
Topic: Personal Hygiene
A condition, act or omission that may contaminate or spoil food so that its consumption is likely to be dangerous or detrimental to health.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Hazards
A systematic preventive approach to food safety that identifies, evaluates and controls hazards throughout the food production process.
Reference: Core HACCP term
Topic: HACCP
The presence of toxic metals such as lead, mercury or arsenic in food, often due to environmental pollution or poor process control.
Reference: Contamination term
Topic: Chemical Hazards
Foods that are more susceptible to contamination and spoilage because of composition, handling, storage conditions or microbiological profile.
Reference: Risk-based food term
Topic: Food Classification
Microorganisms used to assess the hygienic quality of food, water or processing environments. Their presence may indicate unsanitary conditions or possible pathogen risks.
Reference: Testing term
Topic: Microbiology
The presence of pests in food storage, handling or processing areas, requiring control through effective pest management measures.
Reference: Pest term
Topic: Pest Control
Official or internal checks on food businesses, food premises, processes or products to assess compliance and safety.
Reference: Verification term
Topic: Auditing and Compliance
A food preservation technique using ionising radiation to reduce microorganisms, parasites or insects and extend shelf life.
Reference: Processing method
Topic: Food Preservation
Properties of the food itself, such as pH, moisture content and nutrient composition, that influence microbial growth and stability.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
An international food safety management system standard integrating hazard analysis, prerequisite programmes and management system requirements.
Reference: FSMS standard
Topic: Standards and Certification
A separation technique used in some food processing operations, particularly in seafood and related sectors.
Reference: Processing term
Topic: Food Processing
A unit of energy used in thermal food processing and scientific measurements.
Reference: Scientific unit
Topic: Food Science
A process step such as cooking, pasteurisation or sterilisation designed to eliminate or sufficiently reduce pathogens.
Reference: Control measure
Topic: Thermal Processing
Ensuring food labels meet legal requirements, including ingredient declarations, allergen statements, product identity, net contents and other required information.
Reference: Compliance term
Topic: Labelling and Claims
Beneficial bacteria used in fermented foods such as yoghurt, pickles and some dairy or beverage products.
Reference: Beneficial microbe
Topic: Microbiology
The initial phase of bacterial growth during which cells adapt to new conditions before rapid multiplication begins.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
A bacterial pathogen that causes listeriosis and is often associated with ready-to-eat foods, deli meats and some dairy products.
Reference: Pathogen
Topic: Microbiology
A unique identifier assigned to a production batch or lot for traceability, stock control and recall purposes.
Reference: Identification term
Topic: Traceability
Foods with a pH above 4.6 that require specific heat processing controls to prevent Clostridium botulinum growth.
Reference: Risk category
Topic: Thermal Processing
A regulatory and safety process intended to ensure meat products are safe, wholesome and free from unacceptable disease conditions.
Reference: Inspection term
Topic: Meat Safety
A food safety control measure used in production to identify and remove metallic contaminants from food products.
Reference: Detection and control
Topic: Physical Hazards
Bacteria that grow best at moderate temperatures, including many foodborne pathogens and spoilage organisms.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
The total number of microorganisms present in food, ingredients, water or an environment, assessed for safety and spoilage risk.
Reference: Testing term
Topic: Microbiology
The process of heating milk to kill pathogenic bacteria and improve microbiological safety.
Reference: Dairy processing term
Topic: Thermal Processing
A packaging technique that alters gas composition around a product to extend shelf life and maintain product quality.
Reference: Packaging technology
Topic: Packaging and Shelf Life
Toxins produced by moulds that can contaminate foods such as grains, nuts and some dairy-related supply chains.
Reference: Toxin term
Topic: Chemical Hazards
Substances such as salt, vinegar and citric acid used to help extend food shelf life and improve stability.
Reference: Preservation term
Topic: Food Preservation
Food preservation methods such as ultraviolet light, pulsed electric fields and high-pressure processing that do not rely mainly on heat.
Reference: Processing technology
Topic: Food Processing
A highly contagious virus causing foodborne illness, often linked to shellfish, infected food handlers or contaminated surfaces.
Reference: Virus
Topic: Foodborne Illness
Legal or voluntary declaration of nutrient content on food packaging, subject to applicable labelling requirements.
Reference: Nutrition labelling term
Topic: Labelling and Claims
The spoilage of fats and oils due to oxidation or hydrolytic changes, affecting flavour, odour and product quality.
Reference: Quality term
Topic: Shelf Life and Quality
A control measure identified through hazard analysis that is essential to reduce the likelihood of food safety hazards in the product or environment.
Reference: ISO 22000 term
Topic: FSMS and ISO 22000
A chemical reaction that can lead to food rancidity, off-flavours, colour changes and nutrient loss.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Food Chemistry
A heat treatment process used to kill harmful microorganisms in food and beverages while preserving flavour and nutritional quality as far as reasonably possible.
Reference: Core food processing term
Topic: Thermal Processing
Microorganisms that cause disease, particularly those transmitted through food, such as Salmonella, E. coli and Listeria.
Reference: Core hazard term
Topic: Microbiology
Food that is susceptible to microbial growth, spoilage or deterioration because of its composition, pH, moisture content or absence of adequate preservation controls.
Reference: Regulatory concept
Topic: Food Classification
In relation to food premises, the natural person responsible for the food premises or the owner, depending on the context.
Reference: Legal responsibility term
Topic: People and Responsibilities
Measures implemented to prevent, monitor and control insects, rodents and other pests in food facilities.
Reference: Prerequisite programme
Topic: Pest Control
Food that has been packed before being presented for sale or service.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Packaging and Labelling
Basic conditions and activities necessary to maintain a hygienic environment suitable for producing, handling and providing safe food.
Reference: Core FSMS term
Topic: FSMS and HACCP
Measures implemented to prevent, reduce or eliminate food safety hazards in food processing facilities, including sanitation, training and operational controls.
Reference: Control systems term
Topic: Preventive Food Safety
A substance used during food manufacture that may not remain in the final product at significant levels and is not intended as a final ingredient.
Reference: Food science term
Topic: Food Processing
The systematic process of ensuring products meet specified standards and customer expectations through planned activities, monitoring and improvement.
Reference: Management term
Topic: Quality Management
A process used to ensure products consistently meet defined quality standards through inspection, testing and verification during production.
Reference: Quality control term
Topic: Quality Management
Perishable foods that may be consumed without a further process to make them consumable.
Reference: Risk category
Topic: Food Classification
The process of removing or correcting products from the market that are found to be unsafe, non-compliant or potentially harmful.
Reference: Incident management term
Topic: Recall and Traceability
The process of reducing microbial contamination on food contact surfaces to an acceptable level.
Reference: Sanitation term
Topic: Cleaning and Sanitation
Assessment of food quality by examining sensory characteristics such as taste, texture, odour and appearance.
Reference: Quality term
Topic: Quality Management
The length of time a food product can be stored under specified conditions before it becomes unsafe or unsuitable due to quality deterioration.
Reference: Core quality term
Topic: Shelf Life and Quality
Organisms, often bacteria, yeasts or moulds, that deteriorate food quality but do not necessarily cause illness.
Reference: Quality and spoilage term
Topic: Microbiology
The temperature range in which bacteria can grow most rapidly, typically between approximately 5°C and 60°C.
Reference: Core food safety term
Topic: Temperature Control
Regular verification of thermometers, pH meters and other food safety equipment to ensure accurate measurements and reliable monitoring.
Reference: Verification term
Topic: Monitoring and Verification
A poisonous substance produced by bacteria, fungi or chemicals that can cause foodborne illness or product safety failures.
Reference: Toxicological term
Topic: Hazards
The ability to track the movement of food products and ingredients through all stages of production, processing and distribution.
Reference: Core supply chain term
Topic: Traceability
A sterilisation method where food is heated to very high temperatures for a short time to destroy pathogens while maintaining shelf stability.
Reference: Processing method
Topic: Thermal Processing
A non-thermal method using UV light to reduce microorganisms in water, food or food contact applications.
Reference: Non-thermal control
Topic: Food Processing
The presence of allergenic ingredients not declared on a product label, representing a major recall and consumer safety risk.
Reference: Labelling failure term
Topic: Allergen Management
Food that is unacceptable for human consumption according to its intended use because of contamination, spoilage, decomposition or other safety concerns.
Reference: Regulatory concept
Topic: Food Safety and Suitability
Fresh, raw and unprocessed fruits, vegetables, grains, seeds or other crops that have not undergone processing.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Agriculture and Primary Production
A food packaging method where air is removed from the package to reduce spoilage and extend shelf life.
Reference: Packaging term
Topic: Packaging and Shelf Life
The process of obtaining evidence that a control measure or combination of measures is capable of effectively controlling a hazard.
Reference: Core FSMS term
Topic: Validation and Verification
Vehicles, craft or conveyances used in the handling, storage or transport of food.
Reference: Regulatory term
Topic: Transport and Distribution
Ongoing monitoring, checking and confirmation activities used to determine whether procedures and controls are functioning as intended.
Reference: Core FSMS term
Topic: Validation and Verification
Groups at higher risk of foodborne illness, including pregnant women, infants, older persons and immunocompromised individuals.
Reference: Risk communication term
Topic: Public Health
A measure of the available water in food for microbial growth. Foods with lower water activity are generally less prone to spoilage and bacterial growth.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
Microorganisms, often fungi or specialised microbes, that thrive in low-moisture foods such as dried fruits or powdered products.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Microbiology
A detection method used to identify physical contaminants such as metal, glass or dense plastic in packaged food.
Reference: Inspection technology
Topic: Physical Hazards
Microorganisms used in fermentation processes such as bread, beer and some dairy or beverage applications.
Reference: Fermentation term
Topic: Food Microbiology
A foodborne pathogen causing gastrointestinal illness, commonly linked to undercooked pork and contaminated water.
Reference: Pathogen
Topic: Microbiology
The separation of raw, cooked, allergen-containing or high-risk foods to prevent cross-contamination.
Reference: Facility control
Topic: Zoning and Segregation
A thermal processing term representing the temperature change required to achieve a tenfold change in a microbial destruction rate.
Reference: Scientific term
Topic: Thermal Processing
This glossary includes general food safety terminology together with selected regulatory and standards-based concepts relevant to South African food businesses.
South African hygiene regulation commonly referred to as R638.
Codex guidance relevant to claims and food labelling terminology.
ASC Food Safety Consultants supports businesses across South Africa with food safety consulting, HACCP support, hygiene auditing, FSMS implementation, food safety training and practical compliance guidance linked to legislation, standards and real operations.