37.110.503 APPROVED COTTAGE FOOD PRODUCTS (1) Only those products approved by the department and listed in the registration may be produced by a cottage food operation. A cottage food operation is allowed to produce the following food items as long as they are a non-potentially hazardous food: (a) products that may be cooked in an oven including: (i) loaf breads, rolls, biscuits, quick breads, and muffins; (ii) cakes including celebration cakes such as birthday, anniversary, and wedding cakes; (iii) pastries and scones; (iv) cookies and bars; (v) crackers; (vi) cereals, trail mixes, and granola; (vii) pies, except that custard style pies, pies with fresh fruit that is unbaked, or pies that require refrigeration after baking are not approved; (viii) nuts and nut mixes; and (ix) snack mixes; (b) standardized jams, jellies, preserves, and fruit butters as identified under 21 CFR, Part 150, subject to the following: (i) fresh picked or harvested fruits from noncommercial sources are allowed for use; (ii) fresh fruits may be frozen in a household freezer and used at a later time; (iii) all recipes must have a cook step included such as a hot fill or hot water bath, and freezer or refrigerator-style products are not approved; (iv) all jams, jellies, preserves and fruit butters must be sealed in containers that are sterilized prior to filling; and (v) paraffin wax is not allowed for sealing; (c) repackaged, commercially dried fruit or vegetables from an approved source as described in ARM 37.110.510(2), or fresh fruits that: (i) have a natural pH below 4.6, specifically: apples, apricots, grapefruit, lemons, limes, mangos, nectarines, oranges, peaches, plums, pomegranates, tangerines, blackberries, blueberries, cherries, cranberries, currants, gooseberries, grapes, raspberries, strawberries, and huckleberries; and (ii) are dried by cottage food operators with the following methods: (A) during the fruit drying process the fruit must reach 160o Fahrenheit within an hour of processing the fruit; (B) the fruit must then maintain 140o Fahrenheit for the remainder of the drying process; (C) dried fruit may not be packaged using any method of reduced oxygen packaging, including vacuum packaging. (d) dry herb combining and packaging, and seasoning and mixture combining; examples of which are dry bean soup mixes, dry teas and coffees, and spice seasonings; (e) popcorn, popcorn balls, cotton candy; (f) fudge, candies, and confections that require a cook step; (g) molded chocolate using commercial chocolate melts; and (h) honey. (2) The following provisions apply to the production of cottage food products: (a) fresh picked or harvested fruits from noncommercial sources are allowed in baked good products; (b) fresh fruits can be frozen and used at a later time as long as there is a cook step in the recipe; and (c) all frostings or glazes must have a cook step or be made with ingredients (such as a large amount of sugar) that when combined are stable at room temperature. (3) Other products may be approved on a case-by-case basis by the department in consultation with the local health department of the county in which the cottage food operator is registered. History: 50-50-102, 50-50-103, MCA; IMP, 50-50-102, 50-50-116, 50-50-117, MCA; NEW, 2015 MAR p. 1494, Eff. 9/25/15. |