kitchen:food_safety
Table of Contents
Kitchen: Food Safety
Food safety isn’t an option — it’s a requirement. Every team member at McFiler’s & The Hub Bar & Restaurant must know these standards and follow them every time. Our goal: zero violations, no guest illness, a safe and trusted kitchen.
1. Personal Hygiene & Staff Standards
- Wash hands thoroughly (minimum 20 seconds with hot, soapy water) before handling food, after breaks, after touching raw food, after using the restroom.
- Wear clean uniforms or aprons, hair tied back or covered, minimal jewelry, closed-toe non-slip shoes.
- Gloves must be changed when moving between tasks (e.g., raw meat → ready-to-eat food).
- Report to management immediately if you are sick, vomiting, or have a visible wound.
- No eating, drinking, or chewing gum in prep areas.
2. Preventing Cross-Contamination
- Use separate cutting boards, utensils, pans for raw meats, seafood, poultry, and ready-to-eat items.
- Store raw foods below cooked/ready-to-eat foods in refrigerators to avoid drip contamination.
- Clean and sanitize surfaces and tools between uses — raw food contact → next task.
- Label and store allergens separately; prevent shared equipment misuse.
3. Safe Cooking & Holding Temperatures
- Cook proteins and high‐risk items to internal temperatures:
- Poultry (whole or parts): 165 °F / 74 °C.
- Ground meats: ~155-160 °F / 68-71 °C.
- Fish/seafood: 145 °F / 63 °C.
- Hot holding: Keep hot foods at 135 °F (57 °C) or above until service.
- Cold holding: Keep cold foods at 41 °F (5 °C) or below.
- Avoid partial cooking unless approved; never leave items in the “Danger Zone” (41 °F–135 °F / 5 °C–57 °C) for too long.
4. Cooling, Reheating & Storage
- For cooling cooked items: bring down from ~135 °F to ~70 °F within 2 hours, then to 41 °F or below within 4 more hours.
- Reheat leftovers or previously cooked items to 165 °F before service.
- Use FIFO (First In, First Out) for stock rotation; label date, item name, and use-by.
- Store food at least 6 inches off the floor, covered or wrapped.
- Keep storage areas clean, dry, and free of pests or leaks.
5. Absolute Cleaning & Sanitizing Standards
- Clean and sanitize all food‐contact surfaces, utensils, equipment after each use or whenever switching tasks.
- Use approved sanitizers (chlorine, QUATs, iodine) at correct concentrations – follow label contact times.
- High-touch surfaces and equipment (door handles, faucet levers, walk-ins) must be cleaned/sanitized regularly.
- Schedule deep cleaning weekly: behind equipment, ceiling fans, exhaust hoods, storerooms.
- Maintain a cleaning schedule and log; assign staff to specific daily/shift tasks.
6. Inspection, Documentation & Audits
- Maintain temperature logs: refrigeration, hot holding, cooking temps.
- Keep cleaning logs and sign-offs.
- Perform self-audits monthly: review food safety system, equipment, procedures.
- Display hand‐washing signage at sinks; ensure documentation of training.
- Review consumer food‐recall alerts from suppliers; remove/discard affected product immediately.
7. Pest Control & Facility Maintenance
- Store trash securely and remove it at least nightly. Avoid overflow that attracts pests.
- Ensure exterior doors, windows, and vents are sealed; maintain screens.
- Keep floors dry, equipment elevated for cleaning access; repair leaks, cracks promptly.
- Grease traps and hoods cleaned as required; ventilation must operate properly.
- Report all maintenance issues using Facilities Reporting system.
8. Allergen Handling & Service
- Clearly label and identify allergens in recipes and menu items.
- Use dedicated equipment/tools when preparing allergen-free meals.
- Avoid cross‐contact: change gloves, wash hands, sanitize surfaces between allergen and non-allergen preparation.
- Train staff to advise guests that while we do our best, our kitchen handles allergens and cross‐contact is possible.
9. Staff Training & Culture
- All staff must complete food safety training (e.g., ServSafe or equivalent) and refresh annually.
- New hires must be oriented on food safety program within first week.
- Foster a culture of “safety first” — if you aren’t sure, stop and ask.
- Encourage staff to report issues immediately (temperature failure, contamination, accident) without fear of repercussion.
10. Why Food Safety Matters
- Protects our guests from foodborne illness and our brand from bad reviews or closures.
- Builds trust — guests return when they feel safe and confident.
- Reduces waste and cost by maintaining proper storage, rotation, and handling.
- Keeps us compliant with regulations and ensures the business can operate without interruption.
✨ By consistently applying these standards, we align every shift, every station, and every person with the mission: to serve safe, delicious, and trustworthy food. Let’s commit to excellence — the kitchen starts the guest experience.
kitchen/food_safety.txt · Last modified: by pat
