All
foods served in a food service establishment must come from an approved source.
Food service establishments should work with their suppliers to ensure the
foods they are using meet the food safety standards.
Temperature
and time are the two most important factors to control. Foods need to be
received and stored as soon as possible. The staff of the food service
establishment should be checking for temperatures and conditions of incoming
foods.
All
refrigerated foods should be put away quickly to prevent time and temperature
abuse. Frozen foods should not have large ice crystals, be discolored or
dried-out. Canned goods should have labels, no swelling and flawed seams, rust
or dents. Never accept home-canned foods because of the risk of botulism.
All
canned foods and dry ingredients are stored in a designated area. Foods should
not be stored in areas such as restrooms, furnace rooms, stairwells or
hallways. Foods should be stored off the floor and in closed containers.
Storage
areas should be well ventilated and pest free. Dry storage areas can become a
food source for rodent and insects. Keeping containers closed, in sound
condition and off the floor help to keep the storage area pest free. Stock
rotation is a good management practice.
Foods
and chemicals need to be stored separately. Chemicals should be stored below
and away from foods to prevent chemical contamination.
Cold
holding is storing food under refrigeration at 41°F or below. Refrigeration
prevents food from becoming a hazard by slowing the growth of most microbes.
Some organisms like Listeria monocytogenes is significantly slowed but
not stopped by refrigeration.
The
walk-in refrigerator is the major cold storage area in a food service
establishment. The temperature of a walk-in refrigerator must be sufficient to
adequately hold the food temperature at 41°F or below. The temperature of a
walk-in refrigerator is usually colder than 41°F. to compensate the opening and
closing of doors and demands of adding additional foods for storage and
cooling.
Foods
need to be stored to prevent contamination. All cooked foods and foods that
will receive no further cooking should be stored above other foods. Foods need
to be stored to allow enough space for air to circulate around them.
Thawing
foods may take several hours or days depending on the size of the food item
being thawed. Thawing must be done so that the risk of cross-contamination is
reduced, and the time that potentially hazardous food is in the temperature
danger zone (41°F to 140°F) is kept to minimum.
To
thaw food safely:
- Thaw under
refrigeration (41°F and below)
- Under cold
running potable water (safe to drink) of 70ºF or less as part of the
cooking process.
- In a microwave
then transferred to conventional cooking equipment with no interruption in
the process.
Cooking
is the thermal heating of foods at sufficient temperature over time to kill
microorganisms in the food.
The
following are the requirements for the different foods:
- Beef, fish,
seafood, eggs - 145°F.
- Rare Roast Beef
- 130°F.
- Pork - 145°F.
- Poultry, food
containing poultry, stuffed meats or stuffing containing meat, casseroles,
containing potentially hazardous foods - 165°F.
- Restructed meat,
ground or fabricated meat - 155°F.
Cooking
requirements are based on the biology of pathogens. Different species of
microorganisms have different susceptibilities to heat.
Food
characteristics also contribute to the lethality of cooking temperatures. Heat
penetrates different foods at different rates. High fat content reduces the
lethality of heat. High humidity in the cooking container or the moisture
content of the food aid the lethality of heat.
To
effectively eliminate pathogens, there are a number of factors to consider: the
level of pathogens in the raw product and the initial temperature of the food
and the bulk of the food. Another factor to consider, to kill the pathogenic
organisms in food, cooking must heat all parts of the food to the required
temperatures.
Reheating
is the thermal process to heat foods that have been previously cooked and
cooled in a food service establishment. Proper reheating can eliminate a major
portion of pathogens. Proper reheating is heating a food to 165°F within two
hours.
The
more a food is processed, the greater the risks. When food is held, cooled and
reheated, there is an increased risk from contamination caused by personnel,
equipment, procedures and other factors. When food is cooked and cooled the
product goes through the danger zone (optimal temperature range for
microorganisms to grow) several times which also increase the risks.
Once
a food is heated or cooked, the food must be maintained at a temperature to
limit the growth of bacteria. The correct hot holding temperature is 140°F.
The
potential for growth of pathogenic bacteria increases once a food is reheated
than the potential in raw foods. The spoilage organisms that may be present in
raw foods inhibit the growth of pathogenic organisms by competition. Once a
food is cooked, these spoilage organisms are reduced.
Cooling
is a process of removing heat from food quickly enough to prevent microbial
growth. One method is done by placing foods in shallow containers no deeper
than 2 inches and leaving them uncovered until cold, 41°F or below.
When
potentially hazardous food is cooled for an extended period, the food is
subject to the growth of a variety of pathogenic micro-organisms. Bacteria grow
ideally between 70 - 120°F. (The human body temperature falls in this range).
The longer the time the food is allowed to be held in this range, the greater
the risk of microbial growth. Excessive time for cooling potentially hazard
food has consistently been identified as one of the leading contributing
factors to food borne illness.
Bacteria
(pathogens) can be transferred to food from utensils, surfaces (cutting
boards), food workers hands, raw meats, poultry, fish and seafood.
Contamination
is the presence of disease-causing microorganisms or harmful substances in
food. Food can become contaminated at any time and can be contaminated by other
foods. To help prevent cross-contamination, raw meats, fish, and poultry must
be kept away from cooked and ready-to-eat foods. (i.e. separate cutting boards,
separation of duties, preparing vegetables before preparing meats.)
Employees
need to minimize bare hand contact with cooked and ready-to-eat foods. Equipment,
utensils and food contact surfaces must be washed, rinsed and sanitized.
Temperature
is one of the prime factors that control the growth of bacteria in food. Many
types of pathogens and spoilage bacteria are prevented from multiplying to
significant levels that cause food borne illness with proper holding practices.
All foods need to be stored cold 41°F and below or hot 140°F or above.
Preparation
procedures should have built in barriers to limit the time potentially hazardous
foods are in the temperature danger zone. (41°F to 140°F.)
Control
measure to ensure foods are out of temperature for limited times include:
- Refrigerate
foods before preparation.
- Prepare foods
not further in advance than necessary.
- Prepare small batches
of food and return them to the refrigerator before cooking and serving.
Cooking
requirements are based on the biology of pathogens. The amount of heat required
to destroy the organisms will vary. Different species of microorganisms are susceptible
to varied levels of heat.
To
kill all pathogens in foods, cooking must bring all parts of the food to
required temperature for a correct length of time. The temperatures listed in
our code are high enough to take in consideration the time requirement.
Develop
good serving procedures to protect food and customers.
- Employees should
wash their hands after busing and cleaning tables and after touching any
item that can contaminate their hands
- Avoid touching
ready-to-eat foods with bare hands. Use a utensil such as a tong, deli
tissue or glove.
- Do not re-serve
unwrapped bread, rolls, crackers, salad dressings, or relish trays.
- Avoid touching
the food-contact surfaces of glasses, cups, plates or tableware.
Good
personal hygiene of each food service worker is important to good food handling
practice. Improper hand washing is known to be the number one cause of food borne
illness all over the world
Food
service workers should wash their hands by applying soap and using warm water,
scrubbing thoroughly, rinsing, and then drying using paper towels or a drying
device.
Food
service workers must wash:
- before starting
to work
- during work as
necessary to prevent contamination of foods
- after handling
unclean items
- after handling
raw meat, poultry, or aquatic foods
- after using the
restroom (must wash twice, once in restroom and again in kitchen)
- after eating or
smoking
Food
service workers are required to use utensils to handle ready-to-eat foods.
(i.e. tongs, spoons, tissues, foil, gloves). No bare hand contact of
ready-to-eat foods.
Food
service workers must maintain a high degree of personal cleanliness and
restrain hair as necessary.
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