Pepperfreak,
as a victim of food poisoning from hamburger (it was pulled out of the freezer at a store on Wednesday morning, held in refer at store until Sunday afternoon(assuming normal store refer temps, it would have been basically frozen until Thursday afternoon) ), and then made into meatloaf Sunday afternoon..... we will NEVER eat meatloaf again! Unfortunate result of 12 hours of ........[this part should probably be in the "tales of the Loo" thread]
I like the idea of a separate amateurs competition. But it has to be safe.
Cooking up a batch of xyz??? in your kitchen sink is fun, but if a person doesn't understand basic food safety issues ..... NOT GOOD!
Maybe they make it and keep it in the refer and it's all good. But when they throw some in a jar and ship it cross country for 5 days with no refrigeration...NOT good!
I had the learning curve for fresh salsa. I forgot the vinegar in one batch. Within 5 days, the salsa was spoiling. Funny thing I observed was that the hotter salsas with more hot peppers spoiled later than the salsas with no hot peppers..........HMMMMMMMMMMMM-
I think it's a good thing to keep it to licensed makers at this point. There are lots of places (fairs, farmers markets, local competitions, etc) for folks to get their feet wet at the local level. And there are many ways to get licensed without having to build a full on processing plant! [view threads on co-packers, other kitchens, etc]
Start small, get licensed, even if it is only with your local county health district. If using municipal water and sewer ( read- a place that uses city water and sewer, the city does all the testing and keeps all the records) it would be about 350bucks to get licensed in my area for the first year. After that, it would be around $90 a year.
Basic Food Safety is not something to be taken lightly, and to ask someone to ingest a product they cannot be 100% confident in how it has been processed is NOT GOOD!
jmhumbleo~
salsalady