Use Hygiene Practices For Food Safety
Use Hygiene Practices For Food Safety
Use Hygiene Practices For Food Safety
Introduction
Hygiene Procedures
- Hygiene procedures can cover a wide range of activities and job, hence, we must
follow and considered in all tasks.
- The most important hygiene procedures: food handling, due to the potential to cause illness.
it is a legal requirement to implement strict controls regarding how food is stored, used, handled
and sold.
- In most cases, a business that sells food must have a food safety program.
Note: Food can look, smell and taste perfectly fine but contain dangerous levels of pathogenic bacteria!
Glossary term - Pathogen: A virus, bacterium or other microorganism that causes disease
1. Elderly
2. Pregnant women
3. Children and babies
4. People with immune deficiencies
5. People with food allergies
1. They might contain the types of food-poisoning bacteria that need to multiply to large
numbers to cause food poisoning; and
2. The food will allow the food-poisoning bacteria to multiply
1. Raw and cooked meat (including poultry and game) or foods containing raw or cooked
meat such as casseroles, curries and lasagne
2. Smallgoods such as Strasbourg, ham and chicken loaf
3. Dairy products, for example, milk, custard and dairy-based desserts such as cheesecakes
and custard tarts
4. Seafood (excluding live seafood) including seafood salad, patties, fish balls, stews
containing seafood and fish stock
5. Processed fruits and vegetables, for example salads and cut melons
6. Cooked rice and pasta
7. Foods containing eggs, beans, nuts or other protein-rich foods such as quiche, fresh pasta
and soy bean products
8. Foods that contain these foods, for example sandwiches and rolls; cooked and uncooked
pizza
FSANZ is the chief government organisation responsible for setting food safety standards for
the AUS and NZ.
This is administered through the Australian New Zealand Food Standards Code.
This document sets out the necessary standards that are required for:
1. Food labelling
2. Food composition
3. Product contaminants
4. Codes of conduct
Rotten Egg