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Last Theory

The document outlines the key steps in the flow of food including purchasing, receiving, inspecting, storing, preparing, cooking, cooling, reheating, serving, cleaning and sanitation. It provides details on proper temperatures, procedures and safety standards that should be followed at each step to prevent foodborne illness.

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rajeev srinivas
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views26 pages

Last Theory

The document outlines the key steps in the flow of food including purchasing, receiving, inspecting, storing, preparing, cooking, cooling, reheating, serving, cleaning and sanitation. It provides details on proper temperatures, procedures and safety standards that should be followed at each step to prevent foodborne illness.

Uploaded by

rajeev srinivas
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Flow of Food
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 Purchasing

 Receiving and Inspecting

 Storing

 Preparation

 Cooking

 Cooling and Reheating food

 Serving
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Purchasing

 The food that is purchased must be safe.

 Approved, reputable suppliers

 Reports on their receiving and storage, processing,


deliveries, cleaning and hygiene, Recall process, HACCP
system

 Deliveries must be done when staff are available to do the


inspections
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Receiving and Inspecting

 Train staff to promptly receive, check and store food –


especially fresh produce and frozen items.

 Signed adjustment / acknowledgement slip of any items to


be rejected and why.

 Criteria to check
 Temperature – use thermometers to check cold, hot and frozen
foods
 Packaging – damage, liquid, pests and expiry dates
 Product quality – colour, texture and odour
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 Eggs
 Must be clean and unbroken
 Air temperature of 7ºC or lower.
 Liquid, frozen and dehydrated eggs must be pasteurized.

 Milk
 Received at 5ºC or lower
 Must be pasteurized and comply with grading standards
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Shellfish

 Received raw or live

 Raw
 Packer’s name, address and certification
 Best before date

 Live
 Tags with date must remain on the container
 These tags will be retained for documentation
 Reject if muddy, broken shells or dead
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Fish to be served raw/partially
cooked
 Must be frozen for a specific time in order to kill parasites

 Sushi-grade fish

 -20ºC or lower for at least 7 days in a freezer

 -35ºC or lower until frozen solid and then stored at -35ºC for
at least 15 hours

 -35ºC or lower until frozen solid and then stored at -20ºC or


lower for at least 24 hours
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Produce (packaged)

 Sliced Melons

 Cut tomatoes

 Fresh-cut leafy greens

 Received at 5ºC or lower


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Storing

 Labeling – name and date

 Rotation – FIFO, schedule, expiration date

 Temperatures – temperature danger zone

 Product placement – storage containers

 Cleaning – regular cleaning schedule

 Cold Storage

 Dry Storage
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Cold Storage

 Maintenance

 Temperatures
 refrigerator (0-4ºC, 5-8ºC)
 freezer (-18ºC)

 Monitoring – records to verify that the cooler is working


accurately

 Airflow
 Do not overload, this prevents airflow
 Frequent opening lets warm air inside which can affect food
safety
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Preventing Cross-Contamination

 Wrap or cover food

 Store raw meat, poultry and seafood separately from ready-


to-eat food

 If they cannot be separate, store ready-to-eat food above raw


meat, poultry and seafood.

 Top to bottom order:


 Ready to eat food
 Seafood
 Whole cuts of beef/pork
 Ground meat and ground fish
 Whole and ground poultry
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Dry Storage

 Dry store areas to be cool and dry

 Temperature of dry store should be between 10 and 21ºC

 Store away from walls, and at least six inches (15 cm) off the
floor

 Should be well-ventilated to help maintain temperature and


humidity
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Preparation

 General Practices
 Equipment – workstations, cutting boards and utensils are clean
and sanitized
 Quantity – Remove from the cooler only as much food as you can
prep in that short period of time.
 Storage – Return prepped food to the chiller, or cook it as quickly
as possible.
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Thawing

 Freezing does not kill pathogens

 When frozen food is thawed, it is exposed to the temperature


danger zone

 Methods of thawing –
 Refrigeration
 Running water
 Microwave
 cooking
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Cooking

 Reduce pathogens in food to safe levels

 Cook to minimum internal temperature

 Different for each food

 Cooking reduces pathogens, but may not destroy spores or


toxins that they may have produced.
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Temperatures

 Poultry, stuffed items 74ºC

 Ground meat / ground seafood / eggs 68ºC

 Seafood / steaks / eggs served hot 63ºC

 Roasts of pork / beef / red meat 63ºC

 Ready to eat food (commercial) 57ºC

 Fruits / vegetables / grains 57ºC


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Cooling

 Temperature danger zone

 Cool food from 57ºC to 21ºC within two hours

 Cool food from 21ºC to 4ºC or lower within four hours

 Methods for cooling –


 Ice bath
 Ice paddle
 Blast chiller
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Reheating

 Food reheated for hot-holding


 From start to finish, we must heat the food to an internal
temperature of 74ºC within two hours

 Food reheated for immediate service


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Serving

 Temperature controls

 Hot-holding equipment

 Food covers

 Guidelines for kitchen staff


 No bare hand contact
 Clean and sanitized serving utensils
 Hold serving ware at the correct position
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Cleaning and Sanitation

 Cleaning – removing visible debris and grease. Usually done


with hot water and detergent.

 Disinfection – uses anti-microbial agents to destroy or


inactivate microbes. It may not kill all pathogens.

 Sanitizing – uses anti-microbial agents to reduce the number


of pathogens to safe levels.

 Sterilizing – uses chemicals, temperature, gas and/or


pressure to kill or inactivate all pathogens.
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Six Step Cleaning Procedure

 Pre-clean / Remove debris

 Main clean / Degrease

 Rinse

 Sanitising

 Final rinse

 Drying
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Types of cleaners

 Detergents

 Degreasers

 Delimers

 Abrasive cleaners

 Sanitising
 Heat sanitizing – Water must be 77C, items must be soaked for 30
seconds minimum, or run through a dishwasher
 Chemical sanitizing – soaking them in sanitizing solution –
chlorine / iodine / ammonium compounds
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 Handwashing
 Hot water temperature should reach at least 38C
 Soap must be a liquid and kept in a easy-to-use dispenser
 Single-use paper towels to dry hands

 Dishwashing
 High temperature machines use hot water to clean and sanitize
 The temperature of the final sanitizing rinse must be at least 82C
 Chemical sanitizing machines can clean and sanitize items at
much lower temperatures.
 Manual dishwashing – three compartment sink
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Three Sink system

 Rinse, scrape or soak items before washing

 FIRST sink - Clean items. Wash in detergent with water at


43C. Use scrub to loosen dirt.

 SECOND sink – rinse items and remove all traces of food and
detergent.

 THIRD sink – sanitize items

 Allow to air-dry
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Thermometers

 Bimetallic stem
 Dial thermometer
 Slower than other thermometers
 15 to 20 seconds
 Probe is 2-3 inches thick – hence not suitable for thin foods

 Thermistor (digital instant-read)


 10 second reading
 Semiconductor – sensing part is at the tip of the probe
 Suitable for thin foods
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 Thermocouple
 Fastest of all instant read thermometers
 2 to 5 seconds
 Two fine wires at the tip of the probe
 Suitable for thin foods
 External wire

 Infrared
 Surface temperature
 Easy to clean
 Less chance of cross-contamination and damage to food
 Cannot measure air temperature or internal temperature of food

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