assessment 3

profiledylanma123
SS_7e_CB_CH8_ComprehensivePPT.pdf

Objectives

Identify the following:

 Correct ways for prepping food to prevent cross-contamination and time-

temperature abuse

 Safe methods for thawing food

 The minimum internal cooking temperatures for TCS food

 The correct way to cook TCS food in a microwave oven

8-2

Objectives

Identify the following:

 The importance of informing consumers of risks when serving raw or

undercooked food

 Requirements for partially cooking TCS food

 Methods and time-temperature requirements for cooling TCS food

 Time and temperature requirements for reheating TCS food

8-3

General Preparation Practices

When prepping food:

 Make sure workstations, cutting boards, and

utensils are clean and sanitized.

 Only remove as much food from the cooler as

you can prep in a short period of time.

o This prevents time-temperature abuse.

 Return prepped food to the cooler or cook it as

quickly as possible.

8-4

General Preparation Practices

Food and color additives:

 Only use additives approved by your local regulatory authority.

 NEVER use more additives than are allowed by law.

 NEVER use additives to alter the appearance of food.

 Do NOT sell produce treated with sulfites before it was received in the

operation.

 Do NOT add sulfites to produce that will be eaten raw.

8-5

General Preparation Practices

Present food honestly:

 Do NOT use the following to misrepresent the appearance of food:

o Food additives or color additives

o Colored overwraps

o Lights

 Food must be presented in the way it was described.

o For example, if a menu offers “Fried Perch,” another fish cannot be substituted.

 Food not presented honestly must be thrown out.

8-6

General Preparation Practices

Corrective actions:

 Food must be thrown out in the following situations:

o When it is handled by staff who have been restricted or excluded from the

operation due to illness

o When it is contaminated by hands or bodily fluids from the nose or mouth

o When it has exceeded the time and temperature requirements designed to

keep food safe

8-7

Thawing

General guidelines for TCS food:

 Thaw food in a cooler, keeping its temperature

at 41˚F (5˚C) or lower.

 Submerge food under running, drinkable water

at 70˚F (21˚C) or lower:

o Use a clean and sanitized food-prep sink.

o Use water flow strong enough to wash away

food bits.

o Never let the temperature of the food go above

41˚F (5˚C) for longer than four hours.

8-8

Thawing

General guidelines for TCS food:

 Thaw food in a microwave.

o Cook it in conventional cooking equipment

immediately after thawing.

 Thaw food as part of the cooking process.

 Some foods may be slacked before cooking.

o Do not let the food get warmer than 41ºF (5ºC).

8-9

Thawing ROP Fish

 Frozen fish received in ROP packaging

must be thawed carefully.

 If the label states that the product must remain

frozen until use, then remove fish from

packaging:

o Before thawing under refrigeration

o Before or immediately after thawing

under running water

8-10

Prepping Specific Food

When prepping meat, seafood, poultry:

 Use clean and sanitized work areas, cutting boards, knives, and utensils.

 Prep raw meat, poultry, and seafood separately or at different times from

fresh produce.

 Remove only as much food as can be prepped at one time.

 Return raw meat to the cooler as quickly as possible after prepping it.

8-11

Prepping Specific Food

When prepping salads containing TCS food:

 Prep the food in small batches.

 Only use leftover TCS ingredients (e.g.,

pasta, chicken, potatoes) that have been

handled safely:

o Cooked, held, and cooled correctly

o Stored for less than seven days at 41˚F

(5˚C) or lower

8-12

Prepping Specific Food

When prepping salads containing TCS food:

 Consider chilling ingredients and utensils

before use.

 Leave food in the cooler until all ingredients

will be mixed.

8-13

Prepping Specific Food

When prepping eggs and egg mixtures:

 Handle pooled eggs (if allowed) with care:

o Cook promptly after mixing or store at 41˚F

(5˚C) or lower.

o Clean and sanitize containers between

batches.

 Consider using pasteurized shell eggs or egg

products for dishes that need little or no

cooking.

 Promptly clean and sanitize equipment used

to prep eggs.

8-14

Prepping Specific Food

When prepping eggs and egg mixtures:

 Take special care when serving a high-risk

population:

o Use pasteurized eggs or egg products when

serving raw or undercooked dishes.

o Unpasteurized shell eggs can be used if the

dish will be cooked all the way through (e.g.,

omelets, cakes).

o Use pasteurized shell eggs if eggs will be

pooled.

 Promptly clean and sanitize all equipment

and utensils used to prep eggs.

8-15

Prepping Specific Food

When prepping battered or breaded food:

 Prep batter in small batches.

 Store unused batter as quickly as possible.

 Throw out unused batter or breading after a

set amount of time.

 Cooke food thoroughly.

 When deep frying:

o Make sure the oil temperature recovers

before loading each batch.

o Do NOT overload fryer baskets.

o Monitor oil and food temperatures and

cooking times.

8-16

Prepping Specific Food

To package fresh juice for later sale:

 The juice must be treated

(e.g., pasteurized) according

to an approved HACCP plan.

 As an alternative, the juice can be labeled

with this warning:

Warning: This product has not been

pasteurized and, therefore, may contain

harmful bacteria that can cause serious

illness in children, the elderly, and people

with weakened immune systems.

8-17

Prepping Specific Food

Produce:

 Make sure produce does not touch surfaces

exposed to raw meat, seafood, or poultry.

 Wash the produce thoroughly before cutting,

cooking, or combining it with other ingredients.

 To wash produce:

o Use running water a little warmer than the

produce.

o Pull apart leafy greens and rinse thoroughly.

 Certain chemicals may be used to wash

produce.

8-18

Prepping Specific Food

Produce:

 When soaking or storing produce in standing

water or an ice-water slurry, do NOT mix:

o Different items

o Multiple batches of the same item

 Refrigerate and hold cut melons, cut tomatoes,

and cut leafy greens at 41˚F (5˚C) or lower.

 Do NOT serve raw seed sprouts if primarily

serving a high-risk population.

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Prepping Specific Food

Ice:

 Make ice from water that is safe to drink.

 NEVER use ice as an ingredient if it was used

to keep food cold.

 Use clean and sanitized containers and scoops.

o Store scoops outside of the ice machine in a

clean, protected location.

o NEVER hold ice in containers that held

chemicals or raw meat, seafood, or poultry.

o NEVER touch ice with hands or use a glass to

scoop ice.

8-20

Preparation Practices That Have Special Requirements

You need a variance if prepping food in these ways:

 Packaging fresh juice on-site for sale at a later

time, unless the juice has a warning label that

complies with local regulations

 Smoking food to preserve it (not to

enhance flavor)

 Using food additives or components to

preserve or alter food so it no longer needs

time and temperature control for safety

 Curing food

8-21

Preparation Practices That Have Special Requirements

You need a variance if prepping food in these ways:

 Custom-processing animals for personal use

(e.g., dressing a deer)

 Packaging food using a reduced-oxygen

packaging (ROP) method

 Sprouting seeds or beans

 Offering live shellfish from a display tank

8-22

Cooking Food

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

165˚F (74˚C) for 15 seconds

 Poultry—whole or ground chicken, turkey, or

duck

 Stuffing made with fish, meat, or poultry

 Stuffed meat, seafood, poultry, or pasta

 Dishes that include previously cooked, TCS

ingredients

8-23

Cooking Food

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

155˚F (68˚C) for 15 seconds

 Ground meat—beef, pork, and other meat

 Injected meat—including brined ham and flavor-injected roasts

 Mechanically tenderized meat

 Ratites—including ostrich and emu

 Ground seafood—including chopped or minced seafood

 Shell eggs that will be hot-held for service

8-24

Cooking Food

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

145˚F (63˚C) for 15 seconds

 Seafood—including fish, shellfish, and

crustaceans

 Steaks/chops of pork, beef, veal, and lamb

 Commercially raised game

 Shell eggs that will be served immediately

8-25

Cooking Food

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

145˚F (63˚C) for four minutes

 Roasts of pork, beef, veal, and lamb

 Alternate cooking times/temperatures

o 130˚F (54˚C) 112 minutes

o 131˚F (55˚C) 89 minutes

o 133˚F (56˚C) 56 minutes

o 135˚F (57˚C) 36 minutes

o 136˚F (58˚C) 28 minutes

o 138˚F (59˚C) 18 minutes

o 140˚F (60˚C) 12 minutes

o 142˚F (61˚C) 8 minutes

o 144˚F (62˚C) 5 minutes

8-26

Cooking Food

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

135˚F (57˚C)

 Fruit, vegetables, grains (rice, pasta), and

legumes (beans, refried beans) that will be

hot-held for service

8-27

Cooking Food

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

175˚F (80˚C)

 Tea

8-28

Automatic iced tea and automatic

coffee machine equipment:

 Tea leaves should have contact with the

water for at least one minute.

Traditional steeping method:

 Tea leaves should be exposed to the

water for about five minutes.

Cooking Food

Cooking TCS food in the microwave oven:

Minimum internal cooking temperature:

165˚F (74˚C)

 Meat

 Seafood

 Poultry

 Eggs

8-29

Cooking Food

Cooking TCS food in the microwave oven:

 Cover the food to prevent drying.

 For even cooking:

o Rotate or stir food halfway through the cooking

process.

o Let the covered food stand for at least two

minutes after cooking.

 Check the temperature in at least two places.

8-30

Cooking Food

General cooking guidelines:

 Specify the cooking time and minimum internal

temperature in all recipes.

 Use thermometers correctly:

o Correct probe

o Thickest part of the food

o At least two readings in different locations

 Avoid overloading cooking equipment.

 Let the temperature of cooking equipment

recover between batches.

8-31

Consumer Advisories

Disclosure:

 Disclose any raw or undercooked TCS items

on the menu.

 Note it on the menu next to the items:

o An asterisk with a footnote can be used.

o The footnote must state that the item is raw or

undercooked, or contains raw or undercooked

ingredients.

8-32

Disclosure

Reminder

Consumer Advisories

Reminder:

 Advise customers who order raw or

undercooked TCS food of the increased risk of

foodborne illness:

o Post a notice in the menu.

o Provide this information using brochures, table

tents, or signs.

8-33

Disclosure

Reminder

Children’s Menus

The FDA advises against offering these items on a children’s menu if they are raw or undercooked:

 Meat

 Poultry

 Seafood

 Eggs

8-34

Operations That Mainly Serve High-Risk Populations

NEVER serve:

 Raw seed sprouts

 Raw or undercooked eggs (unpasteurized),

meat, or seafood

o Over-easy eggs

o Raw oysters on the half shell

o Rare hamburgers

 Unpasteurized milk or juice

8-35

Partial Cooking During Preparation

If partially cooking meat, seafood, poultry, or eggs or dishes containing these items:

 NEVER cook the food longer than 60 minutes

during initial cooking.

 Cool the food immediately after initial cooking.

 Freeze or refrigerate the food after cooling it.

o If refrigerating, hold it at 41ºF (5ºC) or lower and

store it away from ready-to-eat food.

 Heat the food to its required minimum internal

temperature before selling or serving it.

 Cool the food if it will not be served

immediately or held for service.

8-36

Partial Cooking During Preparation

Procedures for partial cooking should describe:

 How to monitor and document requirements

 Which corrective actions will be taken if

requirements are not met

 How parcooked items will be marked after

initial cooking

 How parcooked food will be stored separately from

ready-to-eat food

8-37

8-38

Temperature Requirements for Cooling Food

1. Cool food from 135ºF to 70ºF (57ºC to 21ºC) within two hours.

2. Cool it from 70ºF to 41ºF (21ºC to 5ºC) or lower in the next four hours.

Temperature Requirements for Cooling Food

If you cool food from 135˚F to 70˚F (57˚C to 21˚C) in less than two hours:

 The remaining time can be used to cool it to 41˚F (5˚C) or lower.

 The total cooling time cannot be longer than six hours.

Example: If you cool food from 135˚F to 70˚F (57˚C to 21˚C) in one hour, then you have five hours to get the food to 41˚F (5˚C) or lower.

8-39

Cooling Food

Factors that affect cooling:

 Thickness or density of the food

 Size of the food

o Cut larger items into smaller pieces.

o Divide large containers of food into smaller

containers or shallow pans.

 Storage container

o Stainless steel transfers heat away from food

faster than plastic.

o Shallow pans let the heat from food disperse

faster than deep pans.

8-40

Cooling Food

Methods for cooling food:

 Place food in an ice-water bath.

 Place it in a blast chiller.

 Stir it with an ice paddle.

 Use ice or cold water as an ingredient.

8-41

8-42

Cooling Food

When storing food for further cooling:

 Loosely cover food containers before storing them.

 Food can be left uncovered if protected from contamination.

o Storing uncovered containers above other food, especially raw seafood, meat,

and poultry, will help prevent cross-contamination.

8-43

Reheating Food

Food reheated for immediate service:

 Can be reheated to any temperature if it was

cooked and cooled correctly.

Food reheated for hot-holding:

 Must be reheated within two hours to an internal

temperature of 165˚F (74˚C) for 15 seconds.

 Reheat commercially processed and packaged

ready-to-eat food to an internal temperature of at

least 135˚F (57˚C).