The Hidden Danger of Kitchen Biofilms
In previous blogs, we discussed why cleanliness is not always safe in the kitchen of a food service operation. The fact is that your employees can do everything right in your cleaning program. They clean as they go. They are mindful of preventing cross-contamination. They follow the proper procedures for cleaning visible dirt and grime from the surface first before moving on to sanitizing. They ensure they are following all directions on the cleaners and sanitizers they use. They test for proper sanitizer concentration. And yet, somewhere in your kitchen right now, a microscopic city of bacteria may be thriving, completely untouched by everything you’re doing.
That’s the unsettling reality of biofilms, and it’s one of the most underappreciated food safety threats in commercial kitchens. It is a threat that every foodservice operation should understand and develop protocols to eradicate from its operation.
Individual bacteria are relatively vulnerable on their own. But when they find the right surface, maybe a floor drain, maybe a prep table, or maybe a cutting board, they anchor themselves, begin to reproduce, and create a protective substance around themselves, creating a fortress that helps protect them from sanitizers and typical cleaning and sanitizing protocols.
The result is a layered, organized colony of microorganisms that can include pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella, and E. coli, all living comfortably beneath a shield largely invisible to the naked eye. Biofilms don’t announce themselves. They don’t smell. They don’t discolor your stainless steel. In a visually clean kitchen, they can go undetected for weeks or months.
…scrubbing disrupts the biofilm’s physical structure… dislodges the bacterial colonies, and physically removes them from the surface. Only then does sanitizer have a fighting chance…
Once a biofilm is established, standard sanitizers such as quaternary ammonia, chlorine-based compounds, and even iodine solutions used in our foodservice operations cannot effectively penetrate the biofilm. The chemistry that works perfectly well against free-floating bacteria is essentially blocked when bacteria are protected inside a mature biofilm.
Studies have shown that bacteria living within a biofilm can be anywhere from 10 to 1,000 times more resistant to antimicrobial agents than their free-floating counterparts. This is not a failure of your sanitizer. Sanitizers are formulated to reduce microbial loads on surfaces that have already been properly cleaned. They are the final step, not a substitute for physical removal. When kitchens skip or rush mechanical cleaning and rely solely on sanitization, biofilms don’t just survive, they compound.
This is why the FDA Food Code and food science in general consistently emphasize the critical importance of the cleaning step before sanitizing. Specifically, mechanical action.
Scrubbing disrupts the biofilm’s physical structure. Abrasion breaks apart the structure, dislodges the bacterial colonies, and physically removes them from the surface. Only then does sanitizer have a fighting chance against whatever microbial residue remains. Cleaning is not simply “wiping something down.” It requires friction, appropriate cleaning agents, and enough contact time to do the job before any sanitizer is ever applied.
Practically speaking, this means training your team to scrub, not just wipe. It means using brushes, not cloths alone, on high-risk surfaces like floor drains, gasket seals, cutting board grooves, and crevices where biofilms form. It means recognizing that a smooth, dry-looking surface can still harbor an invisible colony if it was never properly scrubbed in the first place.
Biofilms are a useful reminder that food safety is, at its core, a science. A surface can look spotless and be genuinely dangerous. Structured cleaning protocols that prioritize mechanical scrubbing before sanitizing, regular deep-cleaning schedules for high-risk zones, and ongoing staff training on the “why” behind each step are what separate a safe kitchen from one that merely appears to be. Risk Nothing.
READ MORE POSTS
Food Safety Considerations for the “New Way” of Dining, Part II – Back-of-house
In our first blog this month, we discussed the importance of front-of-house practices as we emerge from the pandemic this summer and into fall. Making your guests feel safe will be an important point as we welcome them back to our establishment. The safer they feel, the more likely they are to revisit and this could, in turn, be a competitive advantage for your business.
Food Safety Considerations for the “New Way” of Dining
Spring is my favorite time of year, as we head out of the winter months, welcome warmer weather, and increase the daylight hours. As such, we turnover a new leaf and welcome new life as our grass, trees, and perennials come out of dormancy. This year as the Coronavirus vaccine continues its roll out and we welcome a third vaccine onto the market this morning, perhaps this spring we are turning over a ‘new leaf’ in a much more profound way, as we see light at the end of the Coronavirus tunnel.
Developing Good Food Safety Habits
Good habits and habit development are something that has fascinated me for several years. If you’ve attended any the training programs or presentations that my colleagues and I have conducted through our Center for Food Safety in Child Nutrition Programs, you’ve likely heard me opine about the importance of habits and how habits are created. Many times, in foodservice operations we wonder why our staff don’t follow the food safety practices we have established in our operation. Perhaps they don’t wash their hands when they are required, perhaps they just don’t use the proper method of handwashing, or perhaps we find that they don’t complete our HACCP logs as often as our program dictates should occur. And while we can stomp our feet and say “it is their job, they should just do it”, it really isn’t that simple. We can’t order people to change, although if we could, business and human resources would be so much simpler.
Getting Your Playbook for Food Safety Organized
As anyone who has ever worked in a foodservice operation knows, from the time food is received in your establishment to the time it is served to your customers, following proper food safety practices is crucial. What many don’t often think about is this time really should extend from the time the manager places their orders with their suppliers (including which purveyors you utilize), through the time the food is consumed – even if that consumption occurs off your premises and days after the original order was picked up by the guest. This is something that has certainly been highlighted by the pandemic as customers across the nation are utilizing take-out, curbside to go, and third-party delivery options more so now than ever before.













