Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Kitchen hygiene
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Easy answer - don't ever eat in a restaurant. Once you know how the food got on your plate, you will only want to eat roadkill.....off the road.
Don't forget though this TV was based on the cheffing of untrained chefs. Try that in a good kitchen and the next thing on the special of the day would be their genitals. Probably lightly chargrilled and nestling on a compote of teeth puree.
Hygiene is one of the key ingredients in cooking. That's why so many open plan kitchens are in fashion so the diner can watch what goes on. On the other hand, an untrained, pressured cook will do whatever they want. Yum. And no doubt you've seen the expose programmes about what can go on. For goodness sake tip when you eat out or suffer the consequences!!
I am a chef with experience of resteraunts of different catering levels. And I'm sorry to say that although I take great pride in my own hygene, I know A LOT of other chefs wouldn't. Nickmo is pretty spot on about the fact that the head chef would (or should) kick off about hygene, but I'm afraid the awful truth is that a lot of business' today care about profits rather than hygene, and in most resteraunts I've worked in, getting the food out to the punter takes priority over cleaning.
The best advice I can offer is this;
1 - Simply eat somewhere that looks clean and well maintained. The chances are that the owner/manager must obviously realise that hygene is an issue, and will have hopefully made his head chef run his kitchen accordingly.
2 - Eat somewhere expensive. If the food in the resteraunt is cheap, then the staff must be getting paid less (or the company isn't making any money). Cheaper staff = less training or experience.
3 - Check out the staff - do they look tidy? If you really are concerned about a chefs responsibility in the kitchen, look at him/her (I know sometimes you can't). They should take pride in their appearence. Tidy uniform with appropriate appenditures, eg. a hair net or rubber gloves.
I'm sorry if these statements are a little of the bloody obvious, but it is that simple. Eating out is always going to contain these risks, and I'm afraid the only things stopping chefs doing what they want is either good management or hygenic personal morals, and some catering establishments have niether.