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Sanitation and Safety

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After eating, drinking, or smoking. After taking off, or putting on a new pair of gloves. ... dishes by hand use a 3 compartment sink. Wash, rinse, sanitize ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sanitation and Safety


1
Sanitation and Safety
2
Foodborne illness
  • Any illness that results from eating contaminated
    food.

3
Consequences of improper food safety
  • Lost profits
  • Insurance increase
  • Lawsuits
  • Less business
  • Damaged reputation
  • Restaurant could fail

4
3 Hazards that contaminate food
  • Biological
  • Physical
  • Chemical

5
Biological Hazards
  • Bacteria
  • Viruses
  • Parasites
  • Molds

6
Bacteria
  • Single celled organisms that live in food, on
    skin, and on clothing.
  • 1 bacteria cell can become 10 billion in 10
    hours.
  • Bacteria is destroyed by heat or cold.

7
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8
Viruses
  • Invade living cells
  • Continues to make other viruses

9
Parasites
  • Multi-celled organism that live in something else
    (host)
  • Can be killed by freezing or cooking
  • Example roundworm in pork
  • When we eat infected food, our body then becomes
    the host for the parasite.

10
Molds
  • A type of fungus
  • Can be slowed by cold, but not destroyed.
  • Yeast is good type of mold.
  • The fuzzy stuff on growing food, is the most
    common type of mold.

11
Physical Hazards
  • This refers to any foreign object in food.
  • Examples hair, glass, packaging materials, bones

12
Chemical Hazards
  • When food is contaminated by chemicals that could
    in contact with food or get mixed in food.
  • Examples cleaning products, bug sprays, food
    additives

13
Potentially hazardous foods
  • Foods that offer a friendly environment for
    pathogens
  • Pathogens disease-producing organisms

14
FAT TOM
  • F Food
  • A Acidity
  • T Temperature
  • T Time
  • O Oxygen
  • M Moisture

15
Measuring moisture content
  • Water activity (Aw) is a measurement of the
    amount of moisture available in food.
  • Aw scale goes from 0 to 1.0
  • Potentially hazardous foods have a measurement of
    .85 or higher.

16
Sources of contamination
  • Direct contamination
  • Cross contamination

17
Direct contamination
  • Comes from food that is received already
    contaminated
  • Example recall of tomatoes that contained
    Salmonella

18
Cross contamination
  • When food is contaminated during preparation,
    cooking or serving.
  • This is most common type of contamination that
    can be prevented through proper handling
    techniques.

19
Ways to prevent cross-contamintion.
  • Personal hygiene and grooming
  • Cleaning and sanitizing
  • Waste disposal
  • Pest control
  • Proper storage of foods
  • Preparation techniques
  • Proper food temperatures

20
Personal hygiene
  • Personal hygiene is the best defense against
    contamination.
  • Every licensed business is required to have a
    hand washing station.
  • Hands should be washed using proper hand washing
    techniques. ( Sing Happy Birthday)
  • Dont cook when you are sick.
  • Cover open wounds and wear gloves.

21
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22
When should you wash?
  • Whenever you come in the kitchen to cook.
  • After using the bathroom.
  • After sneezing.
  • After touching your hair, face, or clothing.
  • After eating, drinking, or smoking.

23
  • After taking off, or putting on a new pair of
    gloves.
  • Before handling food that will not be cooked
    again or ready-to eat food.
  • After handling garbage.
  • After handling dirty equipment, dishes, or
    utensils.
  • After touching raw meats, poultry, fish
  • After caring for or touching animals.
  • Anytime you change from one task to another.

24
Grooming
  • Wear a clean apron/uniform.
  • Tie hair back.
  • Remove jewelry

25
Cleaning
  • Remove soil or food particles from food products
  • Remove soil or food particles from any surface
    that soiled food comes in contact with.
  • Wipe counters often

26
Sanitizing
  • When any contaminate is destroyed either by heat
    (180 F) or chemical.
  • A dishwasher would kill using heat.
  • When washing dishes by hand use a 3 compartment
    sink.
  • Wash, rinse, sanitize
  • Dishes should air dry.

27
How to properly wash dishes
  • Place plug properly in sink (not upside down) Be
    sure that the plug is in tightly so that water
    does not leak out.
  • Fill the sink to 2/3 full with water as hot as
    you can handle. You may need to let the water
    run and get hot first before putting the plug in.
  • Squirt a small amount of dish soap into the
    running water.

28
  • Dishes should be washed using a clean dish cloth.
  • Soap should be rinsed from the dishes under
    running hot water or by dipping in a sink of hot
    water.
  • Dishes are then placed in a drying rack to dry.
    Either a plastic mat or a heavy dish towel should
    be under the drying rack.

29
Cleaning when done
  • Once all dishes are washed, check to see if any
    counters or the stove needs to be wiped off.
  • Remove the drain plug and let the water drain
    out.
  • As the water is draining, run the garbage
    disposal for a minute.
  • When water is drained out, rinse the sink out so
    that no food particles or soap is left.
  • Used dish cloths and towels should be placed in
    the washing machine.

30
Waste Disposal
  • Trash should be thrown away immediately.
  • Trash cans should be changed on a regular basis.

31
Pest Control
  • Pests can carry pathogens.
  • To prevent pest
  • Keep kitchen area clean
  • Store food properly
  • Keep food off floor
  • Establish a pest management system

32
Pest Management
  • Maintain the kitchen so pests cant get in.
  • Take care of waste properly.
  • Use pesticides to eliminate pests.

33
Storing Foods
  • Refrigerator should be kept at 36-40 F.
  • Freezer should be kept at -10 to 0 F.
  • Dry storage should be 50-70 F.
  • FIFO First in--first out. Date foods so that
    the oldest foods are used first.
  • Raw foods should be stored below cooked foods.
  • Drippy foods should be kept in containers.

34
Preparing Foods
  • Beware of cross contamination.
  • Use specific cutting boards for specific tasks.
  • Red for meat, green for produce, blue for
    seafood, yellow for poultry
  • Keep sanitizing solution handy.

35
Cooking Foods
  • Foods should be cooked to the appropriate
    temperatures and held at these temperatures.

36
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37
Cooling Foods
  • Foods need to be cooled to below 41 F as soon as
    possible using one of the following methods.
  • 1-stage method cool food within 4 hours.
  • 2 stage method cool food to 70 F within 2 hours
    and then cool to 41F within 4 hours for a total
    cooling time of 6 hours.

38
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39
3 ways to Thaw Foods
  • In the refrigerator this is the slowest, but
    safest way
  • Under running water or in water water should be
    changed frequently so the temperature remains at
    approximately 70 F.
  • In the microwave this should only be used when
    food will be cooked immediately.

40
Holding Foods
  • Holding refers to keeping prepared foods at the
    right temperature until they are served.
  • Hot foods should be above 135 F
  • Cold foods should be below 41 F
  • Foods that have been in the danger zone longer
    than 2 hours should be thrown out. Foods that
    have been kept longer than 2 hours are referred
    to as time temperature abused foods.

41
Reheating Foods
  • Foods should be reheated to the proper
    temperature and than held.
  • The greater the surface area and the shallower
    the layer, the more rapidly food will heat.

42
HACCPHazard Analysis Critical Control Point
  • This is a food safety system that is used to
    reduce or eliminate the risks from contamination
    hazards.
  • There are 7 steps of the HACCP.

43
  • Conduct a hazard analysis by developing a
    flowchart of food from the dock to the dish.
  • Determine the critical control points.
  • Find where to prevent, eliminate, and reduce
    hazards.
  • Establish critical limits.
  • Make sure equipment operates at the proper
    temperatures.
  • Have thermometers accurately calibrated.
  • Know the proper temperatures for foods.

44
  • Establish monitoring procedures.
  • Keep a logbook of time and temperature for foods
    that are handled.
  • Identify corrective actions
  • Discard food, reject shipments
  • Establish procedures for record keeping and
    documentation
  • Time/temp. logs, checklists, forms
  • Develop verification system
  • Check to see if plan is working, make
    modifications if needed.

45
Agencies that insure proper food handling
  • Local Health Departments
  • Do food safety audits
  • License establishments
  • FDA - Food and Drug Administration
  • Create food-code document of sanitation standards
  • Not a federal law or regulation but guidelines

46
Working Safely
  • Vent steam away from face
  • No knives in dish water
  • Warn coworkers when you have something hot or
    sharp
  • Clean up spills right away
  • Handle sharp items carefully
  • Hold knife pointed down and close to your side
    when walking.

47
Fire Safety
  • Watch for worn cords
  • Know how to properly put out grease fires use
    baking soda, smother, take the pan off the heat
  • Dont overload outlets
  • Note where fire extinguishers are and how to
    properly use.

48
PASS to use a fire extinguisher
  • P pull pin
  • A aim low
  • S squeeze trigger
  • S sweep side to side
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