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Food Business Review | Wednesday, February 02, 2022
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The owner of the bakeries' responsibility is to establish the tight regulations and guidelines that they want all employees to follow to clear the food inspection.
FREMONT, CA: The bakery industry has the highest food safety and sanitary standards. A little blunder in food handling can quickly turn the bakery business into a nightmare. Bakeries have to ensure that they meet all the requirements during the food safety inspection, or else they might be closed. Bakery implements a few best practices to ensure safe food handling that they vision, desire, and drive to build a world-class bakery. It is essential to analyze the most challenging aspects of your company's food safety and inspection service components.
Personal hygiene
Personal cleanliness may be a straightforward food safety recommended practice, but it is frequently disregarded. Some bakery owners and employers are so concerned about the food safety of their products and ingredients that they fail to recognize that they may be the source of the problem. Personal cleanliness can make all the difference in keeping the food free of any bacteria or pathogens that reside in the baker. As the bakery owner, it is their responsibility to establish the tight regulations and guidelines that you want all employees to follow.
Putting on clean clothes
Wear hair nets throughout the day, use gloves while handling the product, and always wash your hands. One of the simplest ways for a bakery to fail a food safety inspection is for staff to break your cleaning regulations. Proper food preparation and cleanliness begin with every person in the bakery who may come into contact with the products. It is to be monitored by the bakery manager that everyone on the staff abides by the rules and follows the same.
Always clean cooking utensils and surfaces
Using dirty utensils repeatedly is a severe risk to food safety. Cross-contaminating products happen by not correctly cleaning tools, cooking surfaces, and cutting boards. The risk of infecting a customer with a foodborne illness can be fatal for a new bakery. It only takes one glimpse of these bugs by clients or a public health inspector to end the bakery business. By ensuring that the kitchen is well cleaned regularly, the owner puts themself in the most significant position to guard against this issue.
Repairs and maintenance of equipment
Bakers frequently rely on mixers, dough sheeters, and bread slicers to efficiently make their goods. As helpful as these machines are, they can be challenging to clean. It is critical that take the time to thoroughly clean the equipment of any food scraps and leftovers from the last task. It is a potential cross-contamination risk, but a lack of maintenance on equipment can cause it to run inefficiently or even break down, resulting in a pricey repair.