( You will learn how to develop the fundamental aspects of a food safety system by ensuring that Awareness, Understanding and Implementation take place in the correct order so that a solid foundation for safe food can be built.
In this course you will learn:
Why food safety is important
Understand food poisoning and how foods can get contaminated
Bacteria, and the most common food poisoning micro-organisms
What systems you can put into place to prevent food poisoning.
Prevent food poisoning by using the food safety pillars:
( You will learn how to develop the fundamental aspects of a food safety system by ensuring that Awareness, Understanding and Implementation take place in the correct order so that a solid foundation for safe food can be built.
In this course you will learn:
Why food safety is important
Understand food poisoning and how foods can get contaminated
Bacteria, and the most common food poisoning micro-organisms
What systems you can put into place to prevent food poisoning.
Prevent food poisoning by using the food safety pillars:
How to clean and sanitise correctly
The importance of hand washing and personal hygiene
How to store foods in a fridge safely as well as the correct way to keep dry foods.
The importance of temperature control in food safety
How to handle food in your kitchen by avoiding cross-contamination, defrosting, cooling and reheating of foods.
What the basic documents needed are, to ensure a good system is in place.
If food safety is not being monitored, there can be no management.
Finally this course will help you monitor important food safety areas so that you can manage your food safety with peace of mind.
In this introduction lecture, I will introduce you to food safety and the principles of the food safety pillars. I will also discuss why food safety is so important in the kitchen.
Food poisoning can be defined as an illness caused by consuming food or drink that has been contaminated, causing nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea.
There are a number of risks of food poisoning, which can come from a number of sources. We will discuss:
Possible causes of food poisoning,
Symptoms
How common food poisoning is.
The role of water in food safety.
Bacteria are single-celled microorganisms which can exist either as independent (free-living) organisms or as parasites (dependent upon another organism for life). They are about 0.5 to 2 micrometres in size. This means we can only see bacterial cells through the microscope.
In this lecture we will discuss:
Defining what bacteria are.
Where we find bacteria.
What bacteria need to survive
In understating what bacteria are, where the live and how they grow, we can begin to understand how to prevent them from growing and causing food poisoning.
The first types of bacteria involved with food are known as food spoilage bacteria and the second is known as food poisoning or pathogenic bacteria.
Within this broad category, there are specific bacteria that we are concerned with in the kitchen environment. This applies to both the home kitchen and a production kitchen such as restaurants, hotels and food service.
These include :
E.coli
Staphylococcus aureus
Salmonella
Listeria monocytogenes
Clostridium
Campylobacter
Food viruses
Cyclospora
It takes several steps to get food from farm to fork. We call these steps, “The food production chain”. Contamination can occur at any point along this chain. Production, processing, distribution and preparation.
In this lecture we will talk about how contamination can happen.
This quiz will test your knowledge on food poisoning and the microorganisms that cause this illness.
The food safety pillars are the key elements in preventing food poisoning in the kitchen environment. Without these pillars, no foundation for safe food can be built.
This is lecture we will discuss:
The Cleaning pillar
Dishwasher
Scullery
Clean-as-you-go
Deep cleaning
This lecture shows you how to use the commercial dishwasher.
Cleaning pots and pans correctly is just as important in food safety as hand washing and should follow a consistent method that ensure that items are cleaned correctly and eliminates the growth of bacteria.
In this lecture we will show you why cleaning in this section is so important. And we will talk about the special focus on cutting boards.
This lecture will show you how to clean and sanitise cutting boards correctly.
This is an important part of food safety that helps in the prevention of cross-contamination during the preparation of food. With the previous topics discussed in the cleaning pillar, we addressed starting with clean equipment. The principle in clean as you go, is to keep tables, knives and direct contact equipment clean and free of germs.
In this lecture you will learn about :
Clean-as-you-go.
What and when to clean.
Why a cleaning schedule in important.
In this lecture you will learn how to implement cleaning and sanitising correctly.
One of the biggest causes of food poisoning in the kitchen and at home are hands that are contaminated with harmful bacteria.
In this lecture we talk about the importance of:
Hand washing
Personal hygiene
The use of gloves in the kitchen
This lecture will show you how to wash your hands correctly.
In this lecture we discuss how to store foods safely, meaning:
Storing foods in a way that prevents contamination.
Cold food storage
Dry food storage
Egg food safety
The use of cardboard boxes.
Temperature control in the kitchen forms part of the food safety pillars which is critical in ensuring the prevention of bacterial growth and overall quality of foods.
Temperature control ensures that foods that are meant to be served hot are kept at the required temperature and foods meant to be served cold are not left out at dangerous temperatures.
In this lecture you will learn about:
Temperatures for hot and cold food
Fridge/Freezer temperatures
The danger zone
Keeping temperature records
Using food thermometers
How to freeze and defrost (thaw) foods safely.
How food is handled during storage and preparation is the fifth and final pillar of food safety . Food Handling carries the greatest risk when dealing with cross-contamination.
This is where, colour-coding, food preparation separation and negligence come into play.
In this lecture you will learn about:
Why colour-coding is important
The basic colour-code
How to safely accept delivered foods
The 3-step receiving procedure
Acceptable delivery temperatures
How to safely sanitise fruit and vegetables
How to cool down foods safely
How to defrost (thaw) foods correctly
Reheating foods and what to do with leftovers.
This quiz will test your understanding of the clean and sanitising pillar.
This quiz will test your knowledge on deep cleaning and checklist implementation.
This quiz will test your knowledge on hand washing and personal hygiene.
This quiz will test your knowledge on the safest way to store food.
This quiz will test your understanding of what temperatures food should be kept at, how to safely cook, cool and defrost foods.
This quiz will test your understanding of how to handle food safely.
Each piece of the food safety puzzle has now been put into place.
We understand why food safety is important and have a good idea of what food poisoning is. We also gave you a few examples of how contamination can happen through the food production chain.
Certificates and checklists in a kitchen help you comply with the law and help you manage the operations of the kitchen.
These checklists are designed to prove due diligence in food safety of the kitchen.
Food laws require that you prove that you were not negligent in causing food poisoning, and not the other way round, the consumer does not need to prove that you made them sick.
Checklists include:
Certificates of compliance
Cleaning certificates for the extraction canopy
First aid kits and inventory lists
Oil monitoring kits and checklists
Chemical and food safety training*
A thermometer and temperature records
Receiving / Delivery records
Pest Control certificates and service reports
Cleaning schedules, procedures and checklists
Chemical dispenser reports & MSDS
Before any food safety system can be implemented, you have to start with the basics of food safety. This means awareness, understanding and then implementation. We also need the commitment of yourself, the owner and/or senior mangers.
In this final lecture I will take you through each step involved in preventing food poisoning by using the food safety pillars.
Implementing a food safety system may not be easy, but following these steps are guaranteed to produce results.
OpenCourser helps millions of learners each year. People visit us to learn workspace skills, ace their exams, and nurture their curiosity.
Our extensive catalog contains over 50,000 courses and twice as many books. Browse by search, by topic, or even by career interests. We'll match you to the right resources quickly.
Find this site helpful? Tell a friend about us.
We're supported by our community of learners. When you purchase or subscribe to courses and programs or purchase books, we may earn a commission from our partners.
Your purchases help us maintain our catalog and keep our servers humming without ads.
Thank you for supporting OpenCourser.