Certified food managers know that washing and sanitizing utensils, tools and preparation surfaces keeps food safe, but some items in kitchens present a challenge when it comes to sanitation. Long cutting boards, giant mixers, slicers and other types of equipment are simply too large to run through your dishwashing machine or wash in a triple sink. Let’s take a close look at how certified food managers properly wash these large kitchen tools to keep them clean and sanitary for production.
How Certified Food Managers Can Wash Large Kitchen Tools Properly
We’ve all seen those long cutting boards that run the length of the production line or the giant mixers used to make dough in massive batches, and we all know the challenges in keeping these items sanitary. Certified food managers know that simply wiping large kitchen tools like these long cutting boards down with a properly mixed sanitizer may not cut it; more care needs to be taken in order to properly clean these them.
When dealing with long cutting boards or moveable preparation surfaces that cannot fit in your warewashing machine, it’s important that both top and bottom of these boards are cleaned and sanitized. You may not use the bottom of the board, but that doesn’t mean that contaminates haven’t made their way underneath and begun to breed foodborne illness hazards. We suggest removing these boards from your line and finding an appropriate area to scrub and sanitize both sides. We’ve heard that some certified food managers utilize the top of an empty triple sink in order to create enough space to clean large kitchen tools like these long cutting boards properly.
Large mixing bowls, giant storage containers and other awkward implements present another challenge. These aren’t necessarily the easiest to scrub and sanitize. Rather than simply wiping them out with a sanitizer solution, we suggest certified food managers move unwieldy kitchen tools into your dish washing area in order to have access to hot water and the necessary detergents to clean properly. After being scrubbed, make sure that these large containers are thoroughly rinsed, sanitized and allowed to air dry before their next use.
Do you have a plan for those awkward kitchen tools that don’t fit in a conventional warewashing machine?
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