Restaurant Food Cooling Practices†

Author:

BROWN LAURA GREEN1,RIPLEY DANNY2,BLADE HENRY3,REIMANN DAVE4,EVERSTINE KAREN5,NICHOLAS DAVE6,EGAN JESSICA6,KOKTAVY NICOLE5,QUILLIAM DANIELA N.3,

Affiliation:

1. 1National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MS F60, 4770 Buford Highway, Atlanta, Georgia 30341

2. 2Metro Nashville–Davidson County Public Health Department, 311 23rd Avenue, North Nashville, Tennessee 37203

3. 3Rhode Island Department of Health, 3Capitol Hill, Cannon Building, Room 203, Providence, Rhode Island 02908

4. 4Minnesota Department of Health, 12 Civic Center Plaza, Suite 2105, Mankato, Minnesota 56001

5. 5Minnesota Department of Health, 625 Robert Street North, Saint Paul, Minnesota 55164

6. 6New York State Department of Health, Bureau of Community Environmental Health & Food Protection, 547 River Street, Flannigan Square, Room 515, Troy, New York 12180, USA

Abstract

Improper food cooling practices are a significant cause of foodborne illness, yet little is known about restaurant food cooling practices. This study was conducted to examine food cooling practices in restaurants. Specifically, the study assesses the frequency with which restaurants meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommendations aimed at reducing pathogen proliferation during food cooling. Members of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Environmental Health Specialists Network collected data on food cooling practices in 420 restaurants. The data collected indicate that many restaurants are not meeting FDA recommendations concerning cooling. Although most restaurant kitchen managers report that they have formal cooling processes (86%) and provide training to food workers on proper cooling (91%), many managers said that they do not have tested and verified cooling processes (39%), do not monitor time or temperature during cooling processes (41%), or do not calibrate thermometers used for monitoring temperatures (15%). Indeed, 86% of managers reported cooling processes that did not incorporate all FDA-recommended components. Additionally, restaurants do not always follow recommendations concerning specific cooling methods, such as refrigerating cooling food at shallow depths, ventilating cooling food, providing open-air space around the tops and sides of cooling food containers, and refraining from stacking cooling food containers on top of each other. Data from this study could be used by food safety programs and the restaurant industry to target training and intervention efforts concerning cooling practices. These efforts should focus on the most frequent poor cooling practices, as identified by this study.

Publisher

International Association for Food Protection

Subject

Microbiology,Food Science

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