Cross-Contamination
Time–Temperature Abuse
Thermometers
Danger Zone
Food Safety Practices
100

What is one way to keep raw and ready-to-eat foods from contaminating each other?

Use separate equipment for each type of food.

100

Food is abused any time it spends too long in what temperature range?

41°F–135°F (the danger zone).

100

Which thermometer has a metal stem and measures from the tip to the dimple?

Bimetallic stemmed thermometer.

100

What is the name of the temperature range where bacteria grow fastest?

The temperature danger zone.

100

Before using a thermometer, what should you do to it?

Wash, rinse, sanitize, and air-dry it.

200

Before and after every task, what must be done to prep areas and tools?

Clean and sanitize them.

200

Not cooking food to the correct internal temperature is an example of what?

Time–temperature abuse.


200

Thermocouples and thermistors measure temperature using what?

A metal probe with a digital display.

200

What lower limit marks the beginning of the danger zone?

41°F.

200

How accurate must a food thermometer be?

Within ±2°F.

300

What scheduling trick helps reduce cross-contamination at a single prep table?

Prep raw foods at a different time than ready-to-eat foods.

300

What’s one monitoring step to prevent time–temperature abuse?

Regularly record temperatures and the times they were taken.

300

What thermometer measures only surface temperatures?

Infrared (laser) thermometer.

300

Why is minimizing time in the danger zone critical?

Microorganisms multiply rapidly in this range.

300

What part of food should a thermometer probe be inserted into?

The thickest part.

400

What purchasing strategy reduces the risk of contamination from overhandling?

 Buy foods that are already prepared or partially prepped.

400

Why must food be moved through the danger zone quickly during cooling?

Slow cooling increases bacterial growth risk.

400

What tool shows the highest temperature reached during cooking?

Maximum registering thermometer.

400

What types of food require the nearest consistent monitoring for danger zone exposure?

TCS foods (Time/Temperature Control for Safety foods).

400

What is one reason a thermometer may need recalibration?

It was dropped or exposed to temperature shock.

500

What barrier between foods must be avoided when storing or prepping produce?

Raw meat, poultry, and seafood must be kept separate from unwashed produce.

500

What should a food handler do if food is found outside safe temperature limits?

Take corrective action—such as reheating or discarding.

500

What device attached to packaging changes color if product safety is compromised by time-temperature abuse?

Time–temperature indicator (TTI).

500

At what point must food be discarded when held without temperature control?

 When it has been in the danger zone too long, depending on the food type (typically 4 hours).

500

What is the ice-point calibration method used to set a thermometer to?

32°F (0°C).

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