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SERVSAFE/Chapter 5

SERVSAFE/Chapter 5. THE FLOW OF FOOD: AN INTRODUCTION. REMINDERS. TCS food is food that requires time and temperature control for safety The most basic way to avoid cross-contamination is to keep raw and ready-to-eat food away from each other. Steps in the FLOW OF FOOD. Purchasing

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SERVSAFE/Chapter 5

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  1. SERVSAFE/Chapter 5 THE FLOW OF FOOD: AN INTRODUCTION

  2. REMINDERS • TCS food is food that requires time and temperature control for safety • The most basic way to avoid cross-contamination is to keep raw and ready-to-eat food away from each other.

  3. Steps in the FLOW OF FOOD • Purchasing • Receiving • Storing • Preparation • Cooking • Holding • Cooling • Reheating • Serving

  4. Ways to PREVENTCross-Contamination • Separate equipment • Clean and sanitize • Prep food at different • times • Buy prepared food

  5. DANGER TEMPERATURE ZONEFood Service Industry 41 degrees F. to 135 degrees F. (pathogens grow in this range) 70 degrees F. to 125 degrees F. (pathogens grow faster in this range)

  6. Food is temperature abused when it is… • Cooked to the wrong internal temperature • Held at the wrong temperature • Cooled or reheated incorrectly

  7. How do you AVOID Time-Temperature Abuse? • Monitor when food items should be checked, how often, and by whom • Tools: Make sure the right kinds of thermometers are available • Have foodhandlers record temperatures regularly • Have procedures in place to limit the time food spends in the temperature danger zone • Make corrections when time and temperature standards are not met.

  8. THERMOMETERS • Bimetallic stemmed thermometers • Thermocouples • Thermistors

  9. Types of Thermometer Probes • Immersion: used to check the temperature of liquids such as soups, sauces and frying oil • Surface: used to check the temperature of flat cooking equipment such as a griddle • Penetration: used to check the internal temperature of food like hamburger patties and fish fillets • Air: used to check the temperature inside coolers and ovens

  10. CALIBRATION METHODS • ICE-POINT METHOD • Fill a large container with crushed ice. Add tap water until container is full. • Put the thermometer stem into the ice water. Wait 30 seconds. (Do not let the probe touch the container) • Adjust the thermometer so it reads 32 degrees F.

  11. CALIBRATION METHODS • BOILING POINT METHOD • Bring tap water to a boil in a deep pan • Put the thermometer stem into the boiling water. Make sure the sensing area is under water. Wait 30 seconds. (Do not let the probe touch the container) • Adjust the thermometer so it reads 212 degrees F.

  12. Thermometer Guidelines • Thermometers must be washed, rinsed, sanitized and air-dried. • Calibrate thermometers regularly. • Check for accuracy. • Never use glass thermometers to check food temperatures. • When checking the temperature of food, insert the probe into the thickest part of the food

  13. VoCats Questions • To check the temperature of a shipment of MAP, vacuum-packed, and sours vide meats, you should insert the thermometer probe between two packages, being careful not to puncture.

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