Keeping Food Safe
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Transcript Keeping Food Safe
Keeping Food Safe
Foodborne Illness
Defined as a disease transmitted to people by food.
Foodborne-illness Outbreak
When two or more people get the same illness after eating the same food.
Costs Involved
Loss of customers and sales
Negative media exposure
Lawsuits and legal fees
Increased insurance premiums
Loss of reputation
Lowered employee morale
Employee absenteeism
Staff retraining
Who is at risk?
Elderly people
Infants and preschool age children
Pregnant women
People with cancer or on chemotherapy,
people with HIV/AIDS, and transplant recipients
Contamination Terms
Hazard: something with the potential to cause harm.
What is an example?
Contamination: means that harmful things are present in food, making it
unsafe to eat.
Poor personal hygiene
Time-Temperature abuse
Cross-contamination
Poor cleaning & sanitizing methods
Purchasing food from unapproved suppliers
Types of Contaminants
Biological
Viruses
Bacteria
Parasites
Fungi-mold, yeast
Chemical
cleaners, polishes, sanitizers, etc.
Physical
Metal shavings from cans, fingernails, hair, fruit pits, etc.
Proper Hygiene
Pull back or cover hair with a hat,
Wear clean clothing.
Wear an apron to protect yourself from splatters.
Remove jewelry before entering the kitchen area.
If you have a cut, wear a band-aid and rubber glove.
Hand Washing
This should become standard routine every time you enter and exit the kitchen!
Use as warm/hot of water you can tolerate.
Apply a dime size of hand soap.
Rub and lather vigorously for 20 seconds-make sure to go past the wrists and between fingers.
Use a nail brush if necessary
Rinse hands well.
Dry hands with paper towel
Fact:
80% of infection diseases are transmitted by touching surfaces
that have germs on them!
What Does Bacteria Need to Grow?
FAT TOM
F – Food – High Protein foods
A – Acidity – Foods having a pH between
4.6-7.0 are the most potentially
dangerous (soups, cottage cheese, beef,
veal, pork, chicken, milk
T – Time – potentially hazardous foods
should not remain in the temperature
danger zone for more than 4 hours
during the entire food handling process
T – Temperature – Danger Zone 40140F
O – Oxygen – Some bacteria requires O2
to grow while others require no oxygen
M – Moisture – The amount of water
present in a food will affect its ability for
bacterial growth. Potentially hazardous
foods include raw bacon, soft cheeses,
meats, and poultry.
Preventing Hazards
Cross Contamination
The spread of pathogens from one surface or food to another
Time-Temperature Abuse
Temperature Danger Zone 40*-140*
The longer food stays in the temperature danger zone, the more time pathogens have to
grow.
Keep cold foods cold and hot foods hot!
Food should not be held at the temperature dangers zones for more than 4 hours!
When in doubt, throw it out!
Store food in coolers properly
Seafood (top)
Whole cuts of beef and pork
Ground meat and ground fish
Whole and ground poultry (bottom)
Quiz
1. If food is held in the temperature danger zone for more than _________
hour(s), throw it out.
a) 1
b) 2
c) 3
d) 4
2. TRUE OR FALSE It is safe for employees to work with food when they have
a sore throat and a fever.
3. TRUE OR FALSE
higher.
To hold hot TCS food safely, keep the food at 125°F or
4. TRUE OR FALSE
Cleaning reduces pathogens on a surface to safe levels.
5. Name the three forms of contamination that can cause foodborne illness.