Mps Have Voted In Favour Of Assisted...
News0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by chris164. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Oil once in a while and wipe off excess, do not chop on the board as this willl cause 'soft spots', scrape the surface, wash and dry it off to avoid warping and splitting, do noy use a steel brush on the surface, avoid harsh chemicals, wipe dry after use as most of the spoil on the surface is moisture.
You don't chop on a chopping board used for food prep as the 'soft spots' encourage bacterial growth. Hot water is no good to clean and remove potential organisms. If it isn't boiling water anyway, you're just giving the bugs a little shower. Non tainting anti-bacterial washes will clean off the surface, but if there are scores etc. this keeps problems below the surface level and will not give a clean surface for prep. So if you wipe the surface to dry it off after use it does help in the hygiene, and if you have good sharp knives as well this means you apply less pressure to the cutting surface and won't have to force the blades through foodstuffs and so score the board deeper as well.
Answered the point as well in that you use a specific surface for certain food prep. Thats why HSE have drawn up codes of conduct for food inc the use of colour coded boards for veg, meat, etc. All surfaces should ideally be washed as soon as they can - don't leave a board for a day or so after use 'til its washed as it will be harder to clean off.
If you regularly 'chop' i.e bones for stock or dressing game, one board regularly maintained and replaced when required is what to use in the home, with a seperate board for other food.