The desirability, indeed the necessity, for standardization of methods
for the examination of foods for contaminant and spoilage mycoflora has
been apparent for some time. The concept of a specialist workshop to
address this problem was borne during conversations at the Gordon
Research Conference on "Hicrobiological Safety of Foods" in Plymouth,
New Hampshire, in July 1982. Discussions at that time resulted in an
Organizing Committee of four, who became the Editors, and a unique
format: all attendees would be expected to contribute and, in most
cases, more than once; and papers in nearly all sessions would be
presented as a set of data on a single topic, not as a complete research
paper. Each session would be followed by general discussion, and then a
panel would formulate recommendations for approval by a final plenary
session. The idea for this format was derived from the famous
"Kananaskis I" workshop on Hyphomycete taxonomy and terminology
organized by Bryce Kendrick of the University of Waterloo, Ontario in
1969. Attendance would necessarily be limited to a small group of
specialists in food mycology. The scope of the workshop developed from
answers to questionnaires circulated to prospective participants. To
generate new data which would allow valid comparisons to be drawn,
intending participants were given a variety of topics as assignments and
asked to bring information obtained to the workshop.