The Second Wave: Food Safety Myths That Deserve Your Attention
Walk into any commercial kitchen, and you’ll find hardworking staff following protocols they have learned over the years. Many are correct, but others are dangerously wrong. In our last blog, we started exploring these myths, and once I started, I couldn’t stop!
- Myth #5: Sanitizer Works Instantly
Sometimes our staff see sanitizer as a quick fix: spray, wipe, and move on. In a busy kitchen where speed matters, the assumption is that chemical contact equals instant sanitation. And while we should be happy when employees are using the sanitizer, it takes time for it to be effective.
Each type of sanitizer: chlorine-based, quaternary ammonium compounds, and iodine-based solutions, needs time in contact with the surface to be effective. Contact time will depend on the concentration of the solution. Too weak, and it’s ineffective; too strong, and it leaves toxic residues.
It is also vital to remember that sanitizers only work on clean surfaces, as soil, grease, and food debris can shield bacteria from chemical contact, thereby reducing the overall efficacy of the sanitizer.
…proper cooking can’t undo what happened when food sat in the danger zone for too long…
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· Myth #6: Food Is Safe Once It Reaches the Right Temperature
End-point cooking temperatures are heavily emphasized in food safety training, leading to the belief that hitting 165°F (or other required temperatures) is the endpoint of safety.
Proper cooking can’t undo what happened when food sat in the danger zone. Reaching the correct internal temperature kills pathogens present at that moment, but it doesn’t reverse toxin production that has already occurred due to temperature abuse. For example, Staphylococcus aureus produces heat-stable toxins when food sits in the danger zone. When cooked, the cooking process can kill the bacteria, but doesn’t destroy the toxins, which can still cause severe vomiting and illness. Similarly, Bacillus cereus forms heat-resistant spores that survive cooking. If contaminated rice sits at room temperature after cooking, spores germinate and produce toxins; reheating won’t make it safe. Proper temperature control throughout the entire food flow is critical, not just at the cooking step.
· Myth #7: Buffets and Salad Bars Are Inherently Risky but Unavoidable
Self-service operations carry an elevated risk due to customer handling, extended display times, and potential contamination from one customer to the next. Many operators simply accept violations as part of the business, but it doesn’t have to be that way.
While buffets and salad bars present challenges, proper controls make them as safe as other service styles. The primary risks include time-temperature abuse, cross-contamination from customers, and environmental contamination. The FDA Food Code outlines specific requirements for self-service operations, which, when followed, help mitigate these risks. Operators who dismiss buffet safety as impossible to control create liability and help to perpetuate this myth.
· Myth #8: You Should Wash All Produce, even if it is Pre-Washed
Some employees perpetuate the myth that you should always wash produce, even if it is pre-washed. I think this may harken back to the “we’ve always done it this way” mentality.
However, if the produce packaging notes that the product is “pre-washed,” “triple-washed,” or “ready-to-eat”, please don’t feel the need to re-wash it! If pathogens survive commercial washing during processing, your employees and processes will not reduce pathogens to safe levels through additional washing. In fact, rewashing in your operation creates a greater risk of cross-contamination than using the product straight from the package.
Food safety myths are dangerous precisely because they seem sophisticated or are accepted as “standards” in some businesses. By supporting a food-safe culture, you encourage your employees to challenge every assumption, require evidence-based practices, and never accept “we’ve always done it this way” as justification. Your operation’s success depends on eliminating not just the obvious mistakes, but also the subtle ones that hide in plain sight.
Have you observed some of these myths shared among your colleagues, or do you have stories to tell of your own? We would love to hear them! Drop me a note at foodsafety@foodhandler.com and share them with us. With your permission, I may be able to use them in a future blog. Risk Nothing.
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Cross Contamination and the Surfaces that go Unnoticed
In October, I ran across a new research study published in the Journal of Food Protection in early-September. The article explored cross contamination in consumer kitchens during meal preparation. One of the authors was a previous SafeBites presenter, Dr. Ellen Shumaker, at North Carolina State University. Although the setting was consumer kitchens and not the commercial kitchen many of you deal with daily, the findings were very applicable to what we often see in the foodservice setting.
Emergency Preparedness: The Not-so Calm After the Storm
If you and your foodservice operation have been hit by an emergency or other disaster, what comes next and how do you move forward? Much of the answer to this is predicated on the actual disaster that you are dealing with – a flood is certainly a much different than a fire, but some of the food safety considerations remain the same if your business has been left intact and has not been damaged by the disaster.
Emergency Preparedness and Responding to a Disaster with Food Safety in Mind
As I write the first blog this month, the realities of the devastation in Florida are coming to light as we also deal with the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, which impacted Puerto Rico late in September. Recent news has been focused on the recovery efforts for all who have been impacted. Thus, I thought it would be fitting this month to discuss emergency disaster planning resources in our first blog and delve into recovering from a disaster in our second blog later this month.
During National Food Safety Education Month is it time for Your Food Safety Refresher?
You see them in every restaurant and commercial foodservice operation across the United States. Framed and proudly displayed, often by the kitchen, the cashier, the kitchen entrance, or the service counter - just as they should be. To what am I referring? The food safety certification certificates, of course!










