To avoid food contamination, frozen food may be prepared from a frozen state or it must be refrigerated at temperatures below 38 degrees F. For up to two hours, you may thaw frozen food under running water at a temperature of 70 degrees F. or below.
To avoid cross contamination, equipment used to prepare food must be cleaned and sanitized between uses and particular care must be exercised when handling a potentially harmful food such as raw poultry, beef, or fish. There is a "danger zone" temperature of 40--140 degrees F. within which food bacteria multiply rapidly and can thrive. The temperature of food should be kept out of this zone.
Safe food storage requires that all foods be wrapped and stored in a clean place. Each item in the walk-in refrigerator, freezer, and dry storage should be in a sealed container or package with a label identifying the contents and date on which they were received. All meats, seafood, vegetables, and dairy products must be refrigerated. The refrigerator temperature must be below 38 degrees F. Freezers should keep foods at below 0 degrees F, and items in dry storage should be kept between 50--70 degrees F. with a relative humidity of 50--60%. A working thermometer must be kept in each unit at all times so that problems may be identified at a glance.
To ensure proper hygiene of food preparation staff, it is essential that they wear safety hair nets, gloves, and clean uniforms.
When you arrive at Canoe at 9 a.m. the next day, the kitchen is abuzz with activity and food preparation is underway for the lunch service. The kitchen staff look wonderful in their bright, clean uniforms. You remove your coat because it feels a little warm in there, and you notice that the kitchen thermometer reads 73 degrees F. A large frozen turkey lies defrosting in a dish on the counter. The head chef explains that he is preparing a chicken casserole and a beef vegetable soup for the lunch special. You observe that his assistant is busy chopping the beef into tiny cubes. Once she gets done and using the same chopping instrument, she starts chopping the chicken into small pieces. You notice that she did not clean and sanitize the instrument before using it to chop the chicken. The chef and his assistants are all wearing gloves, but none of them appear to be wearing hair nets.
You inspect the refrigerator and freezer and notice that they are both spotlessly clean and well-organized. You also note that all the items in these units are stored in sealed containers. You are, however, unable to tell what is held in each container because none of them is labeled or dated. You look for thermometers to record the respective temperature in each unit and discover that neither unit has a thermometer in it. You then walk into the dry storage room that, apart from being extremely clean, has every item neatly stored and properly labeled. The reading on the thermometer is 66 degrees F., and the hygrometer, which measures relative humidity, reads 55%. You continue to observe the activities in the main kitchen for a few more hours; and as you get ready to leave at 1 p.m., you notice the turkey, now a little less frozen, still lying on the counter. You plan to complete and submit the report to Ms. Thomas before you return to Aqua tonight.
How do you complete this activity?
Draft the body of an appropriate document that Ms. Thomas can forward to the agent at Exit Realty.
Develop a response that includes examples and evidence to support your ideas, and which clearly communicates the required message to your audience. Organize your response in a clear and logical manner as appropriate for the genre of writing. Use well-structured sentences, audience-appropriate language, and correct conventions of standard American English.