Personal Hygiene
Food Safety Management
Time and Temperature
Cross-Contamination and Storage
Cleaning and Sanitizing
100

This is the most important way to prevent the spread of pathogens from a food handler to food.

Handwashing

100

This system focuses on identifying hazards and preventing them before they cause foodborne illness.

HACCP

100

TCS food is in the temperature danger zone between these two temperatures.

41°F and 135°F 

100

Using separate cutting boards for raw chicken and lettuce helps prevent this.

Cross Contamination. 

100

This step comes after cleaning, which reduces pathogens on a surface to safe levels.

Sanitizing

200

Food handlers must wash their hands after using this room.

Restroom

200

This HACCP principle involves checking to make sure standards are being met.

Monitoring 

200

Cold TCS food must be held at this temperature or lower.

41°F or lower

200

Raw meat, poultry, and seafood should be stored below this type of food in a walk-in.

Ready-to-eat food.

200

This tool is used to check whether a sanitizer solution is the correct strength.

Test strips


300

A food handler with these symptoms must be excluded from the operation if they have been diagnosed with Norovirus.

Vomiting, diarrhea, or jaundice

300

Periodically assessing the food service system to make sure it is working correctly and effectively is known as this. 

Re-evaluation. 

300

Hot TCS food must be held at this temperature or higher.

135°F or higher

300

Food should be stored at least this many inches off the floor.

6 inches

300

A final rinse for high-heat sanitation must reach this temperature to be effective. 

185°F

400

This type of jewelry is usually the only kind allowed on hands and arms while handling food.

Plain band ring

400

The point in the flow of food where a hazard can be prevented, eliminated, or reduced to a safe level is called this.

Critical control point.

400

Poultry, stuffing, and stuffed pasta must be cooked to this minimum internal temperature?

165°F

400

A container of sanitizer is stored on a shelf above boxed pasta. This creates this type of contamination risk.

Chemical

400

A red bucket is for this type of agent, while a green bucket is for this type of agent. 

Sanitizer and Cleaner 

500

This is the minimum amount of time food handlers should scrub their hands and arms during proper handwashing.

10 to 15 seconds

500

These are considered one the highest vehicles of contamination in a food service operation.

Hands

500

TCS food can stay in the danger zone for this maximum number of hours before it must be thrown away.

4 hours.

500

Ready-to-eat TCS food was prepped on April 1 and stored correctly at 41°F. Without a different manufacturer use-by date, this is the last day it can be served.

April 7 

500

Chlorine, iodine and quaternary ammonium sanitizers must be at minimum these concentrations (ppm) to be considered effective. 

Chlorine = 100ppm

Iodine= 25ppm

Quat= 200ppm

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