1 / 100

Getting Ready to Cook

Getting Ready to Cook. Personal Hygiene & Safety. As a group, please choose and complete one of the 
following: 1. Create a list of rules for personal hygiene in the lab. 2. Create a picture illustrating all of the things that I 
don't want to see in the lab as far as personal hygiene 
goes.

christinen
Télécharger la présentation

Getting Ready to Cook

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Getting Ready to Cook

  2. Personal Hygiene & Safety As a group, please choose and complete one of the 
following: 1. Create a list of rules for personal hygiene in the lab. 2. Create a picture illustrating all of the things that I 
don't want to see in the lab as far as personal hygiene 
goes.

  3. Personal Hygiene & Safety be clean (skin, hair, nails, clothing) long hair should be up no jewellery no nail polish cover open cuts keep sick home WASH YOUR HANDS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMzNCBiBE0g

  4. Handwashing http://foodsafe.ucdavis.edu/html/video.html Handwashing Lab & Lab Layout Activity Fun Hands Facts & Places We Miss handout

  5. Kitchen Safety Examples of unsafe kitchen habits? Carousel for food safety  - safe kitchen practices   - safe use of kitchen chemicals  - using electricity safely   - accident prevention  - stove & microwave safety   - food storage & safety

  6. Goal is to avoid: Cuts

  7. To prevent cuts . . . Keep sharp knives sharp. They are less likely to cause an accident than dull 
ones. Use a cutting board. Cut away from you with the knife blade slanted. For peeling vegetables such as carrots or potatoes, use a peeler instead of a 
knife. If a knife, kitchen scissors, or ice pick starts to fall, get out of the way. Do 
not try to catch it in mid-air. Wash, dry and store knives separately from other dishes and utensils. Keep your fingers away from beaters and blades in appliances. Use knives and other sharp tools only for their intended purpose. Sweep up broken glass immediately. Wrap your hand in a towel to pick up broken glass. When opening cans, cut the lids completely off. Don’t leave sharp knives in a sink full of water.

  8. Falls

  9. To prevent falls . . . Wipe up all spills at once. To reach items stored in high places, use a 
sturdy step stool or ladder. Close cabinet doors and drawers.

  10. Shocks

  11. To prevent electric shock . . . Read appliance booklets before using appliances. Keep electrical cords away from water and hot objects. Do not plug several cords into an electrical outlet at one time. Unplug portable appliances after you have used them. Disconnect appliances before cleaning them. Do not put them in water 
unless the appliance is labeled “immersible.” Before using an appliance, make sure your hands are dry and that you are 
standing on a dry surface. Unplug appliances before bringing metal objects in contact with any working 
parts.

  12. Burns http://www.booneville.k12.ms.us/science/A&P/A&Pphotos.htm

  13. To prevent burns . . . Keep flammable materials away from the top of the range and away from portable 
appliances that produce heat. Use a dry potholder to remove pans from the range. Store flammable substances such as aerosol sprays away from heat sources. Keep pan handles turned inward on the range. When removing a pan lid, tilt the lid away from you and do not hold your face 
directly over the pan. When removing a pan from the oven, pull the rack out. Don’t reach into a hot 
oven. Wear an oven mitt on each hand and use both hands to remove pans from the oven. Use a spoon or tongs, not your fingers, to remove food from hot liquid. Stand back when opening the stove or dishwasher to avoid rising steam.

  14. Fire 
Prevention

  15. Fire Prevention kitchen fires kill hundreds and injure thousands Guidelines don't leave cooking unattended turn stoves off right after you are finished unplug electrical appliances when not in use be alert (42% killed were asleep) wear close fitting clothes keep flammable items away (pot holders, curtains, 
dish towels)

  16. do not overload electrical outlets turn pot handles inward if grease fires start, smother it...NO WATER  - pan...turn off heat source  - oven...close door and turn off heat source clothing on fire  - stop, drop, and roll http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcF2G7cr0-0

  17. First aid for burns run under cool water for 10-15 minutes

  18. Complete Signs of Safety ~ Individual Assignment

  19. In-class Assignment With a partner, or on your own, create a safety poster of 1 of the 
accident prevention tips discussed in class. You must use color. You must have a slogan.

  20. Quiz:

  21. Kitchen Equipment  there are many kitchen tools and a wide variety of 
equipment available to use when planning and 
preparing meals  these include: major appliances, small appliances, 
utensils

  22. Major Cooking Appliances conventional stove convection oven microwave oven

  23. The Stove consists of a cooktop (or range), an oven, and a 
broiler can use either gas or electricity for heat can be freestanding or have separate cooktop and 
oven units

  24. Electric Stove heating units are called elements oven and broiler are in the same compartment (1 heating element on 
 top and one on bottom) Smooth cooktop Coil element cooktop

  25. Gas Stove heating units are called burners easily regulated flame change in heat level is almost immediate broiler and oven often in separate compartments Burner

  26. Separate oven & cooktop Freestanding stove

  27. Other technologies

  28. Industrial (or commercial) stoves

  29. Microwave Oven  magnetron tube turns electricity into microwaves  microwaves are distributed throughout the oven  microwaves bounce around and are absorbed by food  microwaves make food molecules vibrate against each 
 other and the friction causes heat that cooks the food  cooking is much faster than conventional

  30. Convection Oven  similar to a conventional oven, but fan circulates heated air  results in faster cooking and even temperatures throughout 
 the oven  can be combined with a conventional or microwave oven

More Related