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What are the seven principles of HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points)?
- Cooking, cooling, holding, serving, cleaning, training, monitoring
- (1) Conduct hazard analysis, (2) Determine critical control points (CCPs), (3) Establish critical limits, (4) Establish monitoring procedures, (5) Establish corrective actions, (6) Establish verification procedures, (7) Establish record-keeping ✓
- Just cooking and cooling
- Inspect, taste, smell, serve, clean, restock, document
HACCP is the foundational science-based food safety system. The seven principles (FDA, USDA, NACMCF): (1) Conduct a Hazard Analysis — identify biological, chemical, and physical hazards in the operation and at each process step; (2) Determine Critical Control Points (CCPs) — points where control can…
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What are 'TCS foods' and why are they important to food managers?
- Foods served in temperature-controlled stores
- Time/Temperature Control for Safety (TCS) foods — foods that support rapid pathogen growth or toxin formation; require strict time and temperature controls; include meat, poultry, fish, dairy, eggs, cooked starches, cut leafy greens, cut tomatoes, cut melons, sprouts, cooked beans and rice, garlic-in-oil mixtures ✓
- Top Choice Selection foods
- Total Carbohydrate Sources
TCS foods (formerly called Potentially Hazardous Foods/PHF) require strict time and temperature controls because their characteristics support pathogen growth or toxin formation. Characteristics that make foods TCS: (1) High water activity (Aw > 0.85); (2) Neutral or slightly acidic pH (4.6-7.5); (3…
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What are the FDA Food Code-required minimum internal cooking temperatures?
- All foods to 100°F
- Poultry, stuffed foods, stuffing: 165°F (15 sec); Ground meat, ground fish, eggs for hot-holding, mechanically tenderized meat, injected meat: 155°F (17 sec); Seafood, intact pork/beef/lamb, eggs for immediate service: 145°F (15 sec); Plant foods for hot-holding, ready-to-eat commercially processed foods being hot-held: 135°F ✓
- Everything to 200°F
- Cook until food looks brown
FDA Food Code minimum internal cooking temperatures (food/seconds at temperature): (1) 165°F for 15 seconds: poultry (chicken, turkey, duck, goose); stuffed meats, poultry, pasta, fish; stuffing containing TCS food; food reheated for hot-holding; raw meat in microwave (covered, rotated, 2 min rest);…
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What is the proper procedure for cooling cooked TCS food?
- Cool to room temperature on the counter
- Cool from 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours, AND from 70°F to 41°F or below within an additional 4 hours (total 6 hours maximum) ✓
- Cool overnight in refrigerator
- No cooling rules apply
Two-stage cooling per FDA Food Code: (1) From 135°F to 70°F: within 2 hours; (2) From 70°F to 41°F (or below): within additional 4 hours; (3) Total cooling time: 6 hours maximum from 135°F to 41°F. If the first stage (135°F to 70°F) takes more than 2 hours, the food must be discarded — it cannot be …
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What is the food manager's responsibility regarding employee illness?
- No responsibility
- Ensure ill employees are excluded/restricted per FDA Food Code: completely exclude employees with Big Six (Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella non-typhi, Shigella, E. coli O157:H7 or other STEC, Hepatitis A, Norovirus) symptoms or diagnoses, vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice, sore throat with fever, or infected open wounds; document and report appropriately ✓
- Only send home if visibly sick
- Let employees decide
FDA Food Code requires the Person in Charge (PIC) to manage employee illness. Reportable illnesses (employees must report; managers must notify regulators if confirmed): The 'Big Six' pathogens: (1) Salmonella Typhi; (2) Salmonella spp. (non-typhi); (3) Shigella spp.; (4) Shiga toxin-producing E. co…
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What is required of the 'Person in Charge' (PIC) in a food establishment?
- Just the owner
- Per FDA Food Code, a Person in Charge must be present during all hours of operation, must be a Certified Food Protection Manager (in most jurisdictions), demonstrate knowledge of foodborne illness prevention, ensure proper food safety practices, and have authority to direct employees ✓
- Anyone available
- Not required
Person in Charge (PIC) requirements per FDA Food Code: (1) Always present during operating hours — a designated person responsible for food safety; (2) Demonstrate knowledge of foodborne disease prevention, application of HACCP principles, and Food Code requirements (typically demonstrated through c…
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What should a food manager check when receiving food deliveries?
- Just sign the invoice
- Inspect delivery vehicle (clean, in good condition); check temperatures (refrigerated TCS ≤41°F, frozen solid, hot ≥135°F); inspect packaging (intact, no leaks, no signs of pests); check product condition; verify approved sources; reject damaged/unsafe items; document ✓
- Only check the quantity
- Trust the supplier
Receiving is a critical control point — first opportunity to ensure incoming food meets safety standards. Receiving procedures: (1) APPROVED SOURCES — verify suppliers are licensed, inspected, in good standing; for high-risk items (raw oysters, certain juices), specific source documentation may be r…
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What are key elements of facility design that support food safety?
- Just visual appeal
- Smooth, non-absorbent, cleanable surfaces (floors, walls, ceilings); adequate hand-washing stations (with hot/cold water, soap, paper towels) accessible in food prep areas; separate sinks for hand-washing, food prep, and warewashing; proper plumbing with backflow prevention; adequate refrigeration and storage capacity; pest exclusion (sealed openings, screens); proper ventilation; adequate lighting; smooth, easily cleanable equipment ✓
- Anything functional
- Tile floors only
Facility design directly affects food safety capability. Key elements: (1) SURFACES — floors, walls, ceilings: smooth, durable, non-absorbent, easily cleanable; floor-wall junctions coved (rounded); avoid wood floors in wet areas; (2) HAND-WASHING STATIONS — required in food prep, warewashing, restr…
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What is the food manager's role during a regulatory inspection?
- Refuse entry
- Cooperate fully — accompany the inspector, answer questions honestly, provide requested records, take notes, address violations promptly when possible, sign the inspection report (signature acknowledges receipt, not necessarily agreement), follow up on corrections ✓
- Hide problems
- Provide false information
Regulatory inspections protect public health. The Person in Charge (PIC) must cooperate fully. Inspection rights and responsibilities: (1) The regulator has authority to enter the facility during normal operating hours (refusing entry can be a violation); (2) The PIC must allow access to all food pr…
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What is the difference between 'critical' and 'non-critical' violations in food safety inspections?
- No difference
- Critical (or 'priority' in newer terminology) violations directly relate to factors that cause foodborne illness — improper temperatures, poor employee health, cross-contamination, etc.; non-critical (or 'core') violations are general sanitation or maintenance issues that don't directly cause illness — though both must be corrected, criticals require faster correction and carry more weight ✓
- Critical means closing the restaurant
- Non-critical can be ignored
FDA Food Code violation hierarchy (newer terminology used by FDA): (1) PRIORITY ITEMS — directly contribute to the elimination, prevention, or reduction of foodborne illness or injury (formerly 'critical'). Examples: cooking temperatures, cooling rates, hot/cold holding temperatures, employee health…
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What should a food manager do if a foodborne illness outbreak is suspected at their establishment?
- Ignore complaints
- Document complaint details (caller name, contact, date, time, foods, symptoms); notify local health department; preserve suspect food samples; review HACCP and operations for the timeframe; cooperate fully with investigation; communicate with staff; follow legal counsel guidance; do not dispose of relevant evidence ✓
- Destroy all suspect food immediately
- Blame customers
Foodborne illness outbreak response is critical for public health and legal protection. Steps when an illness complaint is received: (1) RESPOND PROFESSIONALLY — listen, express concern, get detailed information; do not admit fault or speculate about cause; (2) DOCUMENT — caller name, contact inform…
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What should a food manager do upon learning of a food recall affecting their products?
- Continue selling until inventory is gone
- Identify all affected product on hand (check codes, lot numbers, dates); separate and clearly mark recalled products to prevent use; remove from inventory; follow recall notice instructions (return, dispose, destroy); document actions; notify affected customers if products were already served; communicate with staff ✓
- Hope no one notices
- Sell at a discount
Food recalls protect public health when contamination, mislabeling, or other issues are discovered. Manager actions upon recall notice: (1) IDENTIFY AFFECTED PRODUCT — recall notices specify product name, brand, sizes, lot numbers, dates, distribution areas; check ALL inventory carefully: dry storag…
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What food allergen training should staff receive?
- No special training needed
- Train staff on the major allergens (FDA recognizes 9 major allergens: milk, eggs, fish, shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, soy, sesame); recognize allergic reaction symptoms; communicate with guests about allergens; prevent cross-contact in preparation, equipment, oils; emergency response to allergic reactions; document training ✓
- Only chefs need to know
- Servers only
Food allergies affect millions and can be fatal; staff training is essential. Major food allergens (FDA Food Allergen Labeling — 9 major as of FASTER Act 2021 added sesame): milk, eggs, fish, shellfish (crustacean), tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, soy, sesame. These account for ~90% of food allergic reac…
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What is the proper procedure for cleaning and sanitizing food contact surfaces in a three-compartment sink?
- Quick rinse
- Step 1 — Scrape and pre-rinse to remove food debris; Step 2 — WASH in first sink with detergent and hot water (110°F+); Step 3 — RINSE in second sink with clean water (110°F+); Step 4 — SANITIZE in third sink (chemical sanitizer at correct concentration and contact time, OR hot water 171°F+ for 30 sec); Step 5 — AIR DRY (never towel dry sanitized items) ✓
- Just rinse with water
- Soap only
Three-compartment sink procedure (the standard for manual warewashing): Step 1 — SCRAPE/PRE-RINSE: remove visible food debris into garbage or disposal; pre-rinse if needed to remove dried food; Step 2 — WASH (first compartment): hot water at least 110°F (43°C); appropriate detergent at correct conce…
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What are the major foodborne pathogens managers must understand?
- Only one pathogen
- Major bacterial pathogens: Salmonella, E. coli (including STEC like O157:H7), Listeria monocytogenes, Campylobacter, Clostridium perfringens, Clostridium botulinum, Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus cereus, Shigella, Vibrio. Major viral pathogens: Norovirus, Hepatitis A. Major parasites: Giardia, Cryptosporidium, Trichinella, Anisakis. Each has specific sources, symptoms, prevention ✓
- All food bacteria are the same
- Only Salmonella matters
Food managers should know major pathogens and prevention. KEY BACTERIA: (1) SALMONELLA — poultry, eggs, produce; symptoms diarrhea/fever 6-72 hrs onset; prevent: cook poultry 165°F, eggs 145°F, no raw/undercooked eggs in immunocompromised; (2) E. COLI O157:H7 (STEC) — ground beef, leafy greens, spro…
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What are the foundational topics that should be covered in new food employee training?
- Just the menu
- Personal hygiene (handwashing, dress code, hair restraints, jewelry, fingernails); employee illness policy; cross-contamination prevention; time/temperature control; cleaning and sanitizing; specific job duties; allergen awareness; emergency procedures; reporting and documentation ✓
- Just cash handling
- Sales techniques only
Comprehensive food employee orientation training topics: (1) PERSONAL HYGIENE — proper handwashing technique (wet, soap, scrub 20 seconds, rinse, dry with paper towel, turn off faucet with towel) and timing (before work, after restroom, after eating/drinking/smoking, after touching face/hair, after …
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What is the food manager's role in pest management?
- Spray pesticides personally
- Implement Integrated Pest Management (IPM): exclusion (sealed openings, screens, door sweeps), sanitation (eliminate food/water/harborage), monitoring (regular inspections, traps), professional pest control service for application of pesticides, documentation, immediate response to evidence ✓
- Ignore pests
- Close at first sign
Pests in food establishments cause serious public health risks: contamination with pathogens (rats with hantavirus, cockroaches with salmonella), filth (droppings, urine, hair), structural damage. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is the recommended approach — minimizes pesticide use, focuses on prev…
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What records should a food manager maintain for regulatory compliance?
- Only sales records
- Employee health records, training records, CFPM certificates, temperature logs (refrigeration, cooking, cooling, hot/cold holding), thermometer calibration, cleaning and sanitizing schedules, pest control service records, supplier invoices and shellstock tags, HACCP plan documents and monitoring, recall records, allergen information, equipment maintenance ✓
- Just the menu
- Nothing required
Documentation supports food safety compliance and serves as evidence during inspections, audits, and outbreak investigations. Records to maintain: (1) EMPLOYEE HEALTH — employee illness agreements (signed acknowledgments of reporting requirements), illness logs (when reported, what symptoms/diagnose…
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Why is buying from approved sources critical to food safety?
- It is not important
- Approved sources comply with applicable laws and inspections, follow established food safety practices, are accountable through licensing, and provide traceability; using unapproved sources (home-canned items, foraged ingredients, unlicensed suppliers) introduces unknown risks and may violate the Food Code ✓
- Only matters for some foods
- Cheaper sources are better
The FDA Food Code requires food to come from approved sources — sources that comply with federal, state, and local laws and inspections. Why critical: (1) REGULATORY OVERSIGHT — approved producers are inspected (USDA for meat/poultry/eggs, FDA for most other foods, state agencies for additional prod…
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What should a food manager do in case of a power outage affecting refrigeration?
- Continue serving
- Keep refrigerator/freezer doors closed (cold preserved 4-6 hours, freezer 24-48 hours); check temperatures with thermometer; assess each food item — TCS food at 41°F+ for over 4 hours total must be discarded; document timeline; consider dry ice or alternate cold storage for prolonged outage; cease operations if extended; notify health department for major events ✓
- Throw away everything immediately
- Use food without checking
Power outages threaten food safety, especially for refrigerated and frozen TCS foods. Manager response: (1) KEEP DOORS CLOSED — every time you open a refrigerator, warm air enters; a closed refrigerator stays cold ~4-6 hours; a closed freezer ~24-48 hours (full freezer holds cold longer than empty);…
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How should a food manager handle a situation where an employee is observed not washing their hands properly?
- Ignore it
- Stop the employee immediately, ensure they wash hands properly, retrain on procedure and timing, document the observation, consider whether others need refresher training, follow up to ensure correction, escalate to discipline if pattern continues ✓
- Fire immediately
- Just remind once
Inadequate handwashing is one of the most common causes of foodborne illness outbreaks. Manager response when observed: (1) STOP THE EMPLOYEE — politely but firmly; address the issue immediately, not later; (2) ENSURE PROPER WASHING NOW — demonstrate proper technique if needed; observe their correct…
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What are the key requirements for a hand-washing station in a food establishment?
- Any sink will do
- Convenient location accessible to food preparation, warewashing, restroom areas; hot and cold running water through a mixing valve; soap (liquid or powder, not bar soap); paper towels or sanitary hand dryer; trash container; signage reminding employees to wash hands; never used for any purpose other than hand-washing ✓
- Just a sink in the restroom
- Outside the building
FDA Food Code requirements for hand-washing stations: (1) LOCATION — accessible to food prep, warewashing, restroom areas; conveniently located so employees actually use them; some jurisdictions require specific proximity (e.g., within 25 feet of food prep areas); separate stations required for sepa…
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What is the proper procedure for reheating previously cooked TCS food?
- Just warm to serving temperature
- Reheat to 165°F (74°C) for 15 seconds within 2 hours, using stove, oven, or microwave (not steam tables, which are for holding only); record temperatures; for commercially processed ready-to-eat items in original sealed package, 135°F is acceptable ✓
- Reheat to 100°F
- No specific requirements
Reheating of previously cooked TCS food for hot-holding: must reach 165°F (74°C) for 15 seconds within 2 hours, throughout the food. Critical points: (1) TIME LIMIT — reheating must occur quickly to minimize time in temperature danger zone; 2 hours maximum from start to reaching 165°F; (2) EQUIPMENT…
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What is the role of the FDA Food Code in food service?
- It is law everywhere
- Model code developed by FDA and updated regularly (current 2022 edition); adopted in some form by most states and local jurisdictions; serves as the basis for state and local food safety regulations; covers food handling, equipment, facilities, employee health, training, enforcement ✓
- Only applies to restaurants
- Optional guidelines
The FDA Food Code is a model regulatory document published by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, updated approximately every 4 years (most recent: 2022 edition). It is not law in itself — but most states and local jurisdictions adopt it (in whole or modified) as the basis for their food safety r…
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How should a food manager handle waste, garbage, and recyclables?
- Pile up indoors
- Use designated waste containers with tight-fitting lids in food prep areas; separate hand-washing from waste removal; empty containers frequently to prevent overflow; outdoor dumpsters cleaned, with closed lids, on cleanable surface, away from food storage and intake; pest control around waste areas; recycling separated as required; documentation of removal services ✓
- Mix with food storage
- No special handling needed
Waste management is integral to food safety — improper handling attracts pests, contaminates food, creates odors, violates regulations. FDA Food Code requirements: (1) INDOOR CONTAINERS — sufficient capacity; tight-fitting lids on food waste containers (especially with TCS food waste); leakproof; du…
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HACCP stands for Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points. What is the first step in developing a HACCP plan?
- Establish critical limits
- Conduct a hazard analysis — identify all potential physical, chemical, and biological hazards at each step of the food preparation process ✓
- Implement a monitoring system
- Set up a corrective action procedure
THE 7 HACCP PRINCIPLES in sequence: (1) CONDUCT A HAZARD ANALYSIS: Identify all potential hazards (biological pathogens, chemical contamination, physical objects) that could reasonably occur at each step of production; (2) IDENTIFY CRITICAL CONTROL POINTS (CCPs): Steps where control is essential to …
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A food service manager observes an employee eating at a food prep station. Why is this a concern and what should the manager do?
- It is not a concern if the employee washes their hands after
- Eating at a food prep station risks contaminating food with pathogens from the employee's mouth, saliva, and hands — the manager should immediately redirect the employee to designated break areas and reinforce the policy ✓
- Only a concern if the food is served raw
- Acceptable if the employee is on their break
EATING AT FOOD PREP STATIONS is a food safety violation because: saliva contains bacteria and viruses (including Norovirus, Strep, Hepatitis A) that can be transferred to hands and then to food surfaces; food particles from the employee's mouth can fall into food being prepared; crumbs attract pests…
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What is a 'three-compartment sink' and what is the correct procedure for using it?
- A sink for washing hands in three steps
- A sink system for washing, rinsing, and sanitising dishes and equipment: (1) First compartment — wash with detergent solution; (2) Second compartment — rinse with clean water to remove detergent; (3) Third compartment — sanitise in approved chemical solution at correct concentration; air dry — never towel dry sanitised items ✓
- A sink with three faucets at different temperatures
- Only used for large cooking pots
THE THREE-COMPARTMENT SINK PROCEDURE is the standard method for manual warewashing: SETUP: Fill each compartment with appropriate solution at correct temperature; prepare chemical test strips; PRE-CLEANING: Scrape and pre-rinse items before placing in sink; (1) WASH: Hot soapy water (at least 110°F/…
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Which foodborne illness pathogen is most commonly associated with improperly cooled foods that were previously cooked?
- Norovirus
- Clostridium perfringens — a spore-forming bacteria that survives cooking; when cooked food cools slowly through the temperature danger zone, C. perfringens can germinate and multiply rapidly to dangerous levels ✓
- Listeria
- E. coli O157:H7
CLOSTRIDIUM PERFRINGENS: CHARACTERISTICS: Spore-forming bacterium; the spores survive normal cooking temperatures; when cooked food (especially stews, gravies, casseroles, large roasts) is cooled slowly, spores germinate and C. perfringens multiplies extremely rapidly in the 130°F-80°F range; SYMPTO…
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What is the best preventive measure against pest entry in a food service facility?
- Spray insecticide daily
- Maintain the physical integrity of the facility — seal all gaps, cracks, and openings 1/4 inch or larger; ensure doors self-close and door sweeps seal completely; maintain window screens; keep dumpster areas clean; this physical exclusion approach prevents entry without relying on pesticides in food areas ✓
- Place poison bait in food prep areas
- Allow a facility cat to roam the kitchen
INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT (IPM) prioritizes PREVENTION over chemical treatment: PHYSICAL EXCLUSION: Seal cracks and gaps (cockroaches enter through gaps as small as 1/16 inch; rodents through 1/4 inch); door sweeps on all exterior doors; self-closing doors; screens on windows and vents; steel wool …
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A food manager discovers that a prep cook has been diagnosed with Hepatitis A. The cook worked 3 days while potentially infectious. What must the manager do?
- Keep it private and monitor the situation
- Report to the local health department immediately; identify the dates the employee worked while potentially infectious; notify potentially exposed customers and coworkers per health department guidance; cooperate fully with outbreak investigation — Hepatitis A is a reportable disease ✓
- Only address it if customers complain
- Send the employee home and take no further action
HEPATITIS A is a REPORTABLE DISEASE — the food manager is legally required to notify the local health department immediately upon learning of a confirmed case in a food worker. NEXT STEPS: EXCLUDE the employee from work immediately (CDC requires 7 days from jaundice onset); CONTACT HEALTH DEPARTMENT…
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What is the correct procedure for cooling a large batch of hot chicken soup (about 5 gallons) after service?
- Place the entire pot in the refrigerator immediately after service
- Use the two-stage cooling method: divide into shallow pans (no more than 4 inches deep) OR use an ice bath with stirring to cool from 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours; then refrigerate to reach 41°F within the next 4 hours ✓
- Let it cool on the counter overnight before refrigerating
- Cool in the same deep pot with the lid on
TWO-STAGE COOLING REQUIREMENT (FDA Food Code): Stage 1: Cool from 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours; Stage 2: Cool from 70°F to 41°F or below within the next 4 hours; TOTAL: From hot to 41°F in 6 hours maximum. WHY SHALLOW PANS: Heat dissipates from surface area — a 4-inch deep pan has much more surface …
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During a health department inspection, an inspector finds the sanitizer concentration to be 15 ppm chlorine (target: 50-200 ppm). What is the likely consequence?
- A warning only — the inspector will return next week
- A critical violation — inadequate sanitizer concentration means food contact surfaces are not being properly sanitised; the inspector may issue a critical finding, require immediate correction, and re-inspect; repeat critical violations can result in permit suspension or closure ✓
- No consequence — 15 ppm is close enough
- The inspector will provide the correct chemicals for free
SANITIZER CONCENTRATION is a CRITICAL VIOLATION in most health codes — it directly impacts food safety. CONSEQUENCES: The inspector documents the finding; the manager must correct it immediately (mix a proper solution at the correct concentration); re-inspection may be required; CRITICAL vs. NON-CRI…
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A CCP monitoring log shows that a cook checked the fryer temperature every 30 minutes but did not record the temperatures in the log — only checkmarks. Why is this inadequate?
- It is adequate — checkmarks confirm the temperature was checked
- Checkmarks without actual temperature values cannot demonstrate that critical limits were met — if there was a problem, there is no documented record of what the actual temperature was; proper HACCP records must include the actual measured values ✓
- Only the manager needs to review logs, not inspectors
- Temperature logs are optional for CCPs
HACCP RECORD KEEPING requires actual data, not just indications that a check was done. A checkmark says 'I looked at the fryer' but does not say 'the fryer was at 350°F which is above the 325°F minimum critical limit.' CORRECT RECORDS: Time of measurement; actual temperature reading; initials or sig…
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A new food service employee completes orientation. When should they receive food safety training and what must it include?
- Training is only needed after they fail a health inspection
- Training must occur before the employee begins food-handling duties — it must include: handwashing procedure; personal hygiene rules; illness reporting policy (when to notify the manager); basic food safety principles for their role; and any job-specific food safety procedures for the tasks they will perform ✓
- Only managers need food safety training
- Training can be delayed until the first health inspection
PRE-SERVICE TRAINING is an FDA Food Code requirement and a food safety best practice. TIMING: Before the employee handles food or food contact surfaces — not after a learning period, not in the first week, BEFORE first task. REQUIRED CONTENT: Handwashing technique and frequency; personal hygiene (ha…
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In a HACCP plan, what is a 'critical limit'?
- The maximum number of customers served
- The maximum or minimum value (such as a temperature or time) that must be met at a critical control point to prevent, eliminate, or reduce a hazard to a safe level ✓
- The cost limit for ingredients
- The maximum storage capacity
CRITICAL LIMIT (HACCP Principle 3): A maximum and/or minimum value to which a biological, chemical, or physical hazard must be controlled at a critical control point (CCP) to prevent, eliminate, or reduce it to an acceptable level. EXAMPLES: Cooking chicken to a minimum internal temperature of 165°F…
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A food service manager learns that an employee has been diagnosed with Hepatitis A. What is the manager's responsibility?
- Allow the employee to keep working with gloves
- Exclude the employee from the establishment and notify the local health department — Hepatitis A is a Big 6 pathogen requiring exclusion and regulatory reporting ✓
- Move the employee to dishwashing only
- Wait to see if symptoms develop
HEPATITIS A — MANAGER RESPONSIBILITY: Hepatitis A is one of the Big 6 highly infectious pathogens. When an employee is diagnosed: (1) EXCLUDE the employee from the food establishment (not just restrict); (2) NOTIFY the local health department (Hepatitis A in a food handler is reportable and may requ…
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What is the recommended air gap to prevent backflow contamination of the potable water supply?
- No gap is needed
- An air gap of at least twice the diameter of the supply pipe (and at least 1 inch) between the water outlet and the flood rim of the sink or equipment ✓
- Exactly 1/4 inch
- The pipe should be submerged in the sink
AIR GAP — BACKFLOW PREVENTION: An air gap is a physical vertical space between a water supply outlet and the flood rim level of the receiving vessel (sink, equipment). It prevents BACKFLOW — the reverse flow of contaminated water into the potable (drinking) water supply, which can occur when pressur…
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What is the FIRST and most effective method of pest control in a food establishment?
- Spraying pesticides regularly
- Denying pests access, food, water, and harborage (prevention) — through sealing entry points, proper sanitation, and eliminating shelter — rather than relying primarily on pesticides ✓
- Setting traps everywhere
- Keeping a cat in the kitchen
INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT (IPM) — PREVENTION FIRST: The most effective pest control denies pests what they need: ACCESS (deny entry): seal cracks/holes, install door sweeps and air curtains, screen windows, keep doors closed; FOOD (deny food): clean spills immediately, store food in sealed containe…
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Which foodborne illness is most associated with improperly cooked ground beef?
- Botulism
- E. coli O157:H7 (Shiga toxin-producing E. coli) — associated with undercooked ground beef; ground meat mixes surface bacteria throughout, so it must reach 155°F internal temperature ✓
- Hepatitis A
- Listeria
E. COLI O157:H7 AND GROUND BEEF: Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC), including O157:H7, is strongly associated with undercooked GROUND beef. WHY GROUND MEAT: On a whole cut of beef, bacteria are only on the surface (which reaches high temperature when seared); GRINDING mixes surface bacteria throu…
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What is the correct sequence of the 7 HACCP principles?
- Monitor, analyze, correct, verify, document, set limits, identify CCPs
- (1) Conduct hazard analysis; (2) Determine critical control points; (3) Establish critical limits; (4) Establish monitoring procedures; (5) Establish corrective actions; (6) Establish verification procedures; (7) Establish record-keeping ✓
- Set limits, identify hazards, monitor, document
- Identify CCPs, conduct hazard analysis, document, monitor
THE 7 HACCP PRINCIPLES (in order): (1) CONDUCT A HAZARD ANALYSIS — identify potential biological, chemical, and physical hazards; (2) DETERMINE THE CRITICAL CONTROL POINTS (CCPs) — points where control is essential to prevent/eliminate/reduce a hazard (e.g., cooking, cooling); (3) ESTABLISH CRITICAL…
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A food manager is verifying the two-stage cooling process. What are the correct time and temperature requirements?
- From 135°F to 70°F within 6 hours total
- From 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours, AND then from 70°F to 41°F within an additional 4 hours (6 hours total maximum) ✓
- From 165°F to 41°F within 1 hour
- Cool to room temperature first, then refrigerate
TWO-STAGE COOLING: Cooked TCS food that will be stored must be cooled rapidly through the danger zone: STAGE 1: From 135°F to 70°F within 2 HOURS; STAGE 2: From 70°F to 41°F within an additional 4 HOURS (6 hours total maximum); if the food does not reach 70°F within the first 2 hours, it must be reh…
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During a health inspection, what is an 'imminent health hazard' that could require a food establishment to close immediately?
- A single dirty dish
- A complete loss of electrical power, water supply interruption, sewage backup, fire, flood, or significant pest infestation — conditions that pose an immediate threat to public health ✓
- A slightly overpriced menu
- An employee without a hairnet
IMMINENT HEALTH HAZARD: A significant threat or danger to health that requires immediate correction or closure to prevent foodborne illness or injury. EXAMPLES: Complete loss of electricity (refrigeration fails, food enters danger zone); water supply interruption or contamination (no handwashing, no…
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What is the most important element in building a strong food safety culture in an establishment?
- Posting rules on the wall
- Active management commitment and ongoing training — managers who model proper behavior, train employees regularly, and hold everyone accountable create a culture where food safety is prioritized ✓
- Threatening employees with termination
- Having the cheapest cleaning supplies
FOOD SAFETY CULTURE: The most effective food safety comes from a strong organizational culture, driven by ACTIVE MANAGERIAL CONTROL. KEY ELEMENTS: Management COMMITMENT and modeling (managers who follow and visibly prioritize food safety set the standard); ONGOING TRAINING (not one-time — regular re…
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How should a food establishment store cleaning chemicals to prevent contamination of food?
- On shelves above food prep areas for easy access
- In a designated area away from and below/separate from food, food equipment, and single-use items — clearly labeled, in original or properly labeled containers ✓
- Mixed in with food storage to save space
- In unlabeled spray bottles near the prep line
CHEMICAL STORAGE — PREVENTING CONTAMINATION: Cleaning chemicals, sanitizers, and pesticides must be stored: AWAY from and SEPARATE from food, food equipment, utensils, linens, and single-use items; below or physically separated so chemicals cannot spill/leak onto food; in a DESIGNATED storage area; …
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At which point in a cook-chill process would 'cooling' be designated as a critical control point (CCP)?
- It is never a CCP
- Cooling is a CCP because improper cooling allows surviving spores to germinate and bacteria to multiply rapidly through the danger zone — it must be monitored against time/temperature critical limits ✓
- Only the cooking step is ever a CCP
- Cooling is only a CCP for raw vegetables
COOLING AS A CRITICAL CONTROL POINT: In a cook-chill or cook-serve-later process, COOLING is a critical control point because: cooking destroys vegetative bacteria but NOT all bacterial SPORES; as food cools through the danger zone, surviving spores can germinate and bacteria multiply rapidly — espe…
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What is the purpose of a 'variance' from the regulatory authority?
- Permission to ignore food safety rules
- Written authorization to deviate from a specific Food Code requirement when using a specialized process (such as smoking food for preservation, curing, or using reduced-oxygen packaging), requiring a HACCP plan ✓
- A discount on inspection fees
- Permission to operate without a license
VARIANCE: A written document issued by the regulatory authority (health department) that authorizes a deviation from a specific Food Code requirement. WHEN REQUIRED: For specialized processes that carry higher risk, such as: smoking food as a method of preservation (not just flavor); curing food; us…
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What records should a food manager maintain regarding employee food safety training?
- No records are necessary
- Documentation of training completion, including dates, topics covered, and employee certification (such as food handler cards and the certified food protection manager certificate) ✓
- Only the manager's own certificate
- Just verbal confirmation
FOOD SAFETY TRAINING RECORDS: Food managers should maintain documentation of: employee food safety training (dates, topics, who attended); food handler cards/certificates (required in many jurisdictions for all food employees); the Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM) certificate (most jurisdict…
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What is the recommended frequency for calibrating a food thermometer to ensure accuracy?
- Once a year
- Regularly — before each shift or daily, when dropped, after large temperature swings, and when accuracy is in doubt; using the ice-point (32°F) or boiling-point (212°F) method ✓
- Only when it stops working entirely
- Calibration is unnecessary for digital thermometers
THERMOMETER CALIBRATION: Food thermometers must be calibrated regularly to ensure accurate readings — an inaccurate thermometer can indicate food is safe when it isn't. CALIBRATION FREQUENCY: Before each shift or daily; when dropped or bumped; after exposure to extreme temperature changes (hot to co…
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A food manager wants to prevent Clostridium botulinum growth in reduced-oxygen packaged (ROP) foods. What is the primary control?
- Adding more salt only
- Strict temperature control (refrigeration) combined with other controls, because C. botulinum is an anaerobe that produces deadly toxin in low-oxygen environments — ROP foods require a HACCP plan and variance ✓
- Leaving the package open
- Cooking at low temperature
CLOSTRIDIUM BOTULINUM AND ROP FOODS: C. botulinum is an ANAEROBIC, spore-forming bacterium that produces a deadly neurotoxin (botulism). RISK in ROP: Reduced-oxygen packaging (vacuum packaging, sous vide, modified atmosphere) creates the low-oxygen environment C. botulinum thrives in; if spores surv…
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What does HACCP stand for, and what is its purpose?
- Health And Cleaning Control Program
- Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points — a system to identify and control food-safety hazards ✓
- Hot And Cold Cooking Practices
- Hygiene And Cleanliness Compliance Plan
HACCP stands for Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points. It is a preventive food-safety management system that identifies biological, chemical, and physical hazards in the flow of food and establishes controls at the points where those hazards can be prevented, eliminated, or reduced to safe le…
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What is a 'critical control point' (CCP) in a HACCP plan?
- Any step in food preparation
- A step at which a control can be applied to prevent, eliminate, or reduce a food-safety hazard to an acceptable level ✓
- The point of sale to the customer
- The location of the manager's office
A critical control point (CCP) is a specific step in the flow of food where a control measure can be applied to prevent, eliminate, or reduce a food-safety hazard to an acceptable level — for example, the cooking step (where heat kills pathogens) or the cooling step (where rapid cooling prevents bac…
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What is the proper procedure for cooling hot TCS food safely?
- Leave it on the counter until it reaches room temperature
- Cool it from 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours, and from 70°F to 41°F within an additional 4 hours (6 hours total) ✓
- Cool it from 135°F to 41°F within 30 minutes
- Cooling time does not matter
The FDA Food Code two-stage cooling rule requires cooling hot TCS food from 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours, and then from 70°F down to 41°F within an additional 4 hours — a maximum of 6 hours total. The first stage is the most critical because the food passes through the warmest part of the danger zon…
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Why is ongoing food-safety training for staff a manager's responsibility?
- It is only required once at hiring
- Because consistent, current training ensures all employees follow correct procedures, and the manager is accountable for the operation's food safety ✓
- Training is optional and rarely useful
- Only new employees ever need training
A food-service manager is responsible for ensuring that staff are trained — initially and on an ongoing basis — in safe food-handling practices, because the manager is accountable for the safety of the food the operation serves. Ongoing training reinforces correct procedures (handwashing, temperatur…
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What is the role of the 'person in charge' (PIC) in a food establishment?
- A ceremonial title with no duties
- To be present and responsible for ensuring food-safety practices are followed during operation, with demonstrated knowledge of food safety ✓
- Only to handle cash
- To do all the cooking personally
The person in charge (PIC) is the individual responsible during operating hours for ensuring that the establishment follows food-safety requirements. The FDA Food Code requires that a PIC be present and able to demonstrate food-safety knowledge — for example, the danger zone, cooking and holding tem…
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How should a food establishment manage its waste and garbage to maintain food safety?
- Let garbage accumulate to save trips
- Remove waste promptly, keep containers covered and clean, and store garbage away from food to avoid attracting pests and causing contamination ✓
- Store garbage in the food-prep area
- Never use lids on garbage cans
Proper waste management is part of facility food safety. Garbage and refuse should be removed from food-preparation areas promptly, stored in durable, leak-proof, pest-proof containers with tight-fitting lids, and kept clean to avoid odors and contamination. Outdoor dumpster areas should be kept cle…
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What is the purpose of an integrated pest management (IPM) program?
- To welcome pests into the facility
- To prevent and control pests by denying them food, water, and shelter, and by working with licensed pest control as needed ✓
- To use as many pesticides as possible
- To ignore signs of pests
An integrated pest management (IPM) program prevents and controls pests using a combination of strategies: denying pests access (sealing cracks, screens, closing doors), removing their food and water sources (cleaning, proper waste handling, eliminating standing water), and removing shelter (reducin…
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What is the purpose of a routine health inspection of a food establishment?
- To shut down as many businesses as possible
- To verify that the establishment is following food-safety regulations and to protect public health by identifying and correcting violations ✓
- To collect taxes
- To rate the food's taste
A routine health inspection by the regulatory authority verifies that a food establishment is complying with food-safety laws and the Food Code, with the goal of protecting public health. Inspectors check temperatures, hygiene practices, cleaning and sanitizing, storage, pest control, and employee h…
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Why must a food establishment obtain food only from approved, reputable sources?
- To support local businesses only
- Because food from approved sources has been produced and handled under regulatory oversight, reducing the risk of contamination, while food from unapproved sources may be unsafe ✓
- Approved sources are cheaper
- It is not actually required
The FDA Food Code requires that food come from approved, reputable sources — suppliers that operate under regulatory inspection and meet food-safety standards. Food from such sources has been grown, processed, and transported under oversight that reduces the risk of contamination, and it can be trac…
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What should a manager do if a foodborne illness outbreak is suspected to be linked to the establishment?
- Ignore it and hope it passes
- Take it seriously: cooperate with the health department, preserve any suspect food, document information, and take corrective action to protect customers ✓
- Destroy all records immediately
- Blame the customers
If a foodborne illness outbreak is suspected, the manager must respond responsibly: notify and cooperate fully with the local health department, preserve any suspect food (do not discard it, as it may be needed for testing), gather and document relevant information (what was served, when, by whom, e…
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What is the appropriate response to an imminent health hazard such as a sewage backup, water supply interruption, or fire in the kitchen?
- Keep operating normally
- Cease operations as needed, notify the regulatory authority, and not resume until the hazard is corrected and approval is given ✓
- Continue cooking with bottled water indefinitely without reporting
- Only address it the next day
An imminent health hazard — such as a sewage backup, loss of safe water or electrical power, flooding, fire, or similar emergency — requires the establishment to cease affected operations as needed to protect public health, notify the regulatory authority, and not resume until the hazard is correcte…
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What should a manager establish to ensure food is received safely from suppliers?
- No standards are needed
- Receiving standards and procedures — including acceptable temperatures, inspection for damage and pests, checking dates, and rejecting unsafe deliveries ✓
- Accept all deliveries without inspection
- Only check the invoice amount
A manager should establish clear receiving standards and train staff to follow them: schedule deliveries when they can be inspected, check that cold TCS foods arrive at 41°F or below and frozen foods are solidly frozen, inspect packaging for damage or leaks, look for signs of pests or thaw-and-refre…
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Why is proper handwashing sink placement and supply important in a facility?
- Handwashing sinks are optional
- Because conveniently located, fully stocked handwashing sinks (with warm water, soap, and disposable towels) encourage frequent, proper handwashing and must be used only for handwashing ✓
- Handwashing sinks can be used to wash food
- One sink is enough for any size facility
Handwashing sinks must be conveniently located so employees can wash hands easily and frequently, and they must be kept stocked with warm running water, soap, and a means of drying (such as disposable paper towels or an air dryer). Critically, handwashing sinks are reserved for handwashing only — th…
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What is the manager's responsibility regarding employee health reporting?
- Discourage employees from reporting illness
- Establish and enforce a policy requiring employees to report specified symptoms and illnesses, and exclude or restrict ill employees as required by the Food Code ✓
- Allow sick employees to work if busy
- Ignore employee health entirely
Managers must establish and enforce an employee health policy consistent with the Food Code, requiring employees to report specified symptoms (vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice, sore throat with fever) and diagnoses of certain foodborne illnesses (such as Norovirus, Salmonella, Shigella, E. coli, and Hep…
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What are the basic flow-of-food steps a manager monitors for hazards, from start to finish?
- Only cooking
- Purchasing/receiving, storing, preparing, cooking, holding, cooling, reheating, and serving ✓
- Only serving
- Only cleaning up afterward
The flow of food describes the path food takes through an operation, and a manager monitors each step for hazards: purchasing and receiving (from approved sources, at safe temperatures), storing (proper temperatures and order), preparing (preventing cross-contamination and limiting danger-zone time)…