Stocking Your Food Safety Toolbox

Blog by Lori Stephens, based directly on SafeBites webinar by Dr. Jeannie Sneed, PhD, February 2018

There are five main contributing factors that lead to foodborne illness.  Based on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, data related to actual foodborne illnesses, these five factors contribute most to outbreaks:

  • food from unsafe sources
  • inadequate cooking
  • improper holding temperatures
  • contaminated equipment
  • poor personal hygiene

All of these factors are preventable, and some can be prevented by using the correct tools to monitor our food production and service processes.

Tools for your Food Safety Toolbox:

Control Factors

  • Temperature Control: This is one of the most important food safety practices in any foodservice operation.  Food can be a source of pathogens that can make people sick.  Some of these pathogens may be in the food when it is delivered.  That is why it is so important to monitor cooking temperatures.  That is also why there are different cooking temperatures recommended for different products—poultry should be cooked to 165 degrees F., ground beef should be cooked to 155 degrees, and all leftovers should be cooked to 165.
  • Controlling Time:  This is highly related to temperature.  Cooking temperatures also have a time factor—for example, cook poultry to 165 degrees F. for 15 seconds.  Remember that time and temperature go together—and must be actively managed for food safety.

Probably the easiest way to talk about actively managing time and temperature for food is to relate it to the flow of food through the foodservice operating.  At steps from receiving through serving, time and temperature must be managed and controlled.

We all know that the temperature danger zone is between 41 and 135, and that it is at these temperatures that bacteria grow most rapidly.  So, we know that we always want to keep time and temperature control for safety, or TCS foods, out of the temperature danger zone.

Physical Tools

  • Thermometers: To control temperature, the key is having the correct type of thermometer and using them correctly.  We will begin exploring our toolbox by talking about thermometers—why they are important, the different types of thermometers, and their use.
    • Bimetallic stemmed thermometer: Perhaps the thermometer that we see most often in foodservice operations. That is the one with the dimple about an inch or so above the tip.  Bimetallic stemmed thermometers need to be calibrated frequently, and they are not tip sensitive.  That means that the temperature sensing area goes from the tip of the probe to the dimple.  These thermometers can be used to check temperatures of liquid or thick foods, but not thin items such as a steak or a hamburger.
    • Thermocouple: This type of thermometer is tip sensitive and very versatile depending on the probe that you use.  There are immersion probes to check liquid foods, surface probes to check flat cooking surfaces such as griddles; penetration probes that are very thin and may be used to check temperatures of thin foods such as hamburger patties, and air probes to check the temperature of refrigeration equipment and ovens.  These thermometers are highly reliable and accurate.
    • Infrared thermometer: This type of thermometer can be used to measure the surface temperature of food and equipment, but can not measure air temperature or the internal temperature of food. It has limited uses in a foodservice operation, although it can give us a quick and non-invasive measure of food temperatures at receiving.
    • T-sticks: These are single-use measures that come in a variety of end-point temperatures—135, 145, 155, 160, and 165.  There is a sensor at the tip that changes color when exposed to the indicated temperature.  For example, if you insert a 155 degree T-stick in a hamburger patty and it turns dark, then you know the hamburger has cooked to 155 degrees.
    • Adhesive single-use thermometers: With these thermometers, you “tape” these on a plate, put it in the middle of a rack of dishes and run it through the dish machine.  If it turns totally black, then you know the rinse temperature is at least 160 degrees, which is the recommendation in the FDA Food Code.
  • Hand Washing: Handwashing is an extremely important factor is preventing foodborne illness. The FDA Food Code calls handwashing out as a “Priority item”, meaning it contributes directly to the elimination, prevention, or reduction the hazards associated with foodborne illness.  Handwashing is the single most important part of personal hygiene.
  • Gloves: Using gloves to prevent cross-contamination – Gloves is a critical tool to minimize or eliminate cross contamination.  It is so important that “no bare hand contact” rules were added to the FDA Food Code and most state and jurisdictional food codes
  • Colored cutting boards: Using cutting board that are colored and only used for one type of product minimizes the chance for cross contamination.  Example include red cutting boards are used for meat, yellow for poultry, and green for vegetables.
    • Colored cutting boards can also be used to minimize Allergen cross-contamination prevention – the most common color is purple to denote that in an operation employees would NEVER use a purple cutting board for foods that contained any of the big 8 allergens.
  • Sanitizer and Buckets: Sanitizing is another key to food safety.
  • Documenting food safety data: Another great food safety tool is documenting food and air temperatures and sanitizing concentrations to ensure the right levels are being maintained.  Remember the old adage—if it hasn’t been documented, it hasn’t been done!

Foodborne Illness Myths & Facts

“It must have been something I ate.”  That’s the typical statement when a person develops some relatively minor symptoms from food.  Maybe not severe enough to go to the doctor so you choose to tough it out without medical care.  Sudden onset of flu-like symptoms such as onset of stomach cramps, diarrhea, vomiting and fever could possibly mean you are the victim of a foodborne illness.   The illness is sometimes referred to as “food poisoning”, but it’s often misdiagnosed.

Don’t Compromise: Clean and Sanitize

The subject is cleaning and sanitizing. Chefs, food service directors, managers and staff try to practice safe food-handling at every turn in the kitchen. Don’t let that effort go down the drain by slacking off on the many aspects of sanitation. That includes dish and ware-washing techniques (pots, pans, equipment), and cleaning all the areas that give us that “neat as a pin” appearance in your customers eyes. Customers seldom fail to bring that soiled silverware or glass with lipstick on it to the attention of the manager or wait staff. Improperly cleaning and sanitizing of food contact equipment does allow transmission of pathogenic microorganisms to food and ultimately our customer.

The Route to Safer Fresh Fruits and Vegetables

Although fruits and vegetables are one of the healthiest foods sources in our diet, we continue to have foodborne disease outbreaks of significance from produce, sometimes affecting large groups of people in multiple states because of their wide distribution. The CDC estimates that fresh produce now causes a huge number of foodborne illness outbreaks in the United States. Produce needs our continued food safety efforts at the restaurant level as well as at the stages in agricultural production. Occasionally, fresh fruits and vegetables can become contaminated with harmful bacteria or viruses, such as Salmonella, E. coli 0157:H7, Norovirus, and Hepatitis A. This contamination can occur at any point from the field to our table. If eaten, contaminated fruits and vegetables can cause foodborne illness.

Be Cool, Chill Out, Refrigerate Promptly!

The Cold Chain -- Keeping perishable foods at proper cold holding temperatures (between 28°F and 41°F maximum or 0°F for frozen food) from your food producers / manufacturers to your customers has to be one of our strongest links to safe food and high quality.   Sometimes that is referred to in the food industry as “maintaining the COLD CHAIN”.  Any slip ups in the cold chain, and we have a weak link.  Most all of our state food regulations require 41°F as a cold maximum, but colder is a “best practice” policy to maintain.