You run a small batch of test product through with the balls in, then dump that product. They’re used to calibrate metal detectors on the at the very end of the production line that for detecting things like shavings or flakes of metal coming off the machinery. It’s likely that the batch wasn’t dumped immediately, and left unsupervised - so someone came along and packaged it because it wasn’t in a container that was well marked as a test sample to be disposed of.
Food production safety can often be horrendously lax, because virtually all staff will skip or ignore parts of the production plan, either intentionally or unintentionally. Worse still, I’ve seen managers specifically write food safety plans that are designed to be cheated, for example, ensuring that a specific test sample is treated as it should be to meet all of the paperwork requirements, while all the food that will actually be eaten is handled at much lower standards.
Can you elaborate on how these are used for testing? I assume they’re not just chucking these in vats of beans and fishing them out later
You run a small batch of test product through with the balls in, then dump that product. They’re used to calibrate metal detectors on the at the very end of the production line that for detecting things like shavings or flakes of metal coming off the machinery. It’s likely that the batch wasn’t dumped immediately, and left unsupervised - so someone came along and packaged it because it wasn’t in a container that was well marked as a test sample to be disposed of.
Food production safety can often be horrendously lax, because virtually all staff will skip or ignore parts of the production plan, either intentionally or unintentionally. Worse still, I’ve seen managers specifically write food safety plans that are designed to be cheated, for example, ensuring that a specific test sample is treated as it should be to meet all of the paperwork requirements, while all the food that will actually be eaten is handled at much lower standards.