It is apparent that traditional quality control is completely unable to eliminate quality problems as such a preventative strategy based on thorough analysis of prevailing conditions which provides assurance that objective of the quality assurance programme are met. This has been developed into the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) system (3). This primarily aims at guaranteeing food safety but can easily be extended to cover spoilage economic fraud. The latest quality systems, such as certification under an International Accepted Standard (ISO 9000 Series) and Total Quality Management (TQM) [are those] in which everybody in an organisation is fully committed to achieving all aspects of quality. These days national food legislations place total responsibility for food quality on the producer (4).