• Title/Summary/Keyword: cutting boards

Search Result 49, Processing Time 0.022 seconds

The Microbiological Assessment and Identification of Food Utensils and Food Service Facilities in School (학교 급식설비 및 집기류의 미생물학적 위해요소 분석)

  • Hong, Seung-Hee
    • Journal of Food Hygiene and Safety
    • /
    • v.29 no.3
    • /
    • pp.189-194
    • /
    • 2014
  • This study was conducted to evaluate microorganism contamination of food utensils and service facilities in school and to prevent hazards by food poisoning occurrence. As a result, the highest number of microorganism growth plate ($12.3{\pm}2.6$) was detected in total bacteria test plate, and also observed $10.3{\pm}3.9$ growth plates in Staphylococcus aureus test plate and $9.5{\pm}3.9$ growth plates in E. coli and coliform bacteria test plate. But we could detect to the lowest number of growth plates ($1.5{\pm}1.0$) in Vibrio test plate. We also assessed that floors were appeared to the highest microorganism contamination rate in food utensils and service facilities. Therefore, $4.5{\pm}0.6$ growth plates was detected in pre-operation floor and $4.3{\pm}1.0$ growth plates in floor. And high level of microorganism contamination also observed in tables as $3.3{\pm}1.0$ growth plates in cooking table and $3.0{\pm}0.0$ growth plates in dining table. The level of microorganism contamination of food utensils such as kitchen knife, cutting board, and food tray were lower than that in food service facilities. We analysed microorganism contamination according to purpose of use in kitchen knifes and cutting boards. The microorganism contamination rate in fish kitchen knife ($2.0{\pm}0.8$) and fish cutting board ($1.3{\pm}1.5$) were slightly higher than that of others purpose of use. As a result of microorganism identification, various strains of microorganism were contaminated in food service facilities and some strains could detected more than two times. Especially, Staphylococcus aureus was repeatedly identified in cooking table, trench, and kitchen knife. Bacillus cereus was identified in kitchen knife, and then Pseudomonas fluorescens and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were also detected in food utensils and service facilities as known to food spoilage microorganisms. Klebsiella pneumoniae was detected four times repeat, which widely distribute natural environment as normal bacterial flora but sometimes cause acute pneumonia. These results suggest that food utensils and service facilities are contaminated with not only major food poisoning microorganisms such as Staphylococcus aureus, but also food spoilage microorganisms. Taken together, strict personal hygiene control and efficient food service facilities management will be needed to enhance food safety in school feeding and to improve student health.

Implementation of HACCP Model for Steamed Rice with Squid Served from Elementary School with Joint-Lunch Management System (공동관리 초등학교의 안전한 오징어덮밥 생산을 위한 HACCP적용)

  • 박금순;이인숙;금경운
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
    • /
    • v.33 no.2
    • /
    • pp.365-372
    • /
    • 2004
  • The purpose of this study was to implement HACCP system to foodservice of W and D elementary schools with joint-lunch management system in Kyungsan area. Steamed rice with squid was selected and Control Action, Monitoring Procedure and Control measure were identified based on HACCP flowchart to produce safe and healthy food. It was suggested that frozen squid must be thawed under the cold running city water and kept temperature below 1$0^{\circ}C$ and receiving/thawing procedure has to be done within 30 min. Raw vegetables must be washed under three-tube wash stand and whole prepreparation procedures should be done in 20 minutes. Clean and sanitize all the equipment and utensils before and after handling squid. Knives and cutting boards for vegetable and squid should be classified. Sauce for steamed rice with squid should be heated about 21 minutes to reach the temperature of 94$^{\circ}C$ before serving and internal temperature of food must be kept above 84.4$^{\circ}C$ during serving. The ideal temperature of kitchen should be remained 15∼18$^{\circ}C$. The underground water has to be excluded to minimize the risk of contamination in the foodservice facility and the prepreparation place must be separated with cooking place. Also, Personal hygiene Practice should be check in each stage. Further, additional research needs to be conducted to determine models for HACCP implementation for different menu.

Microbiological Hazard Analysis for HACCP System Application to Hospitals Foodservice Operations (병원급식소의 HACCP 제도 적용을 위한 미생물학적 위해도 분석)

  • Lee, Byung-Doo;Kim, Jang-Ho;Kim, Jeong-Mok;Kim, Du-Woon;Rhee, Chong-Ouk;Eun, Jong-Bang
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
    • /
    • v.35 no.3
    • /
    • pp.383-387
    • /
    • 2006
  • Microbiological hazard analysis of foodservice facilities and utensils of 6 hospitals in the Honam region was evaluated. In the microaerosol evaluation, the microbial counts of dinning table, kitchen, and freezer were comparatively high, and it indicated the microbial contamination of these facilities should be effectively managed. In the microbiological hazard analysis evaluation of cooking utensils and appliances, the total plate counts of cutting boards, knife, and meal plates were comparatively high but did not reveal significance. The counts of coliforms, Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, were lower than the general limit of microbial contamination, and the microbiological safety of the cooking utensils and appliances were satisfactory. In the microbial safety evaluation of side dishes, microbial counts of heat-cooked foods were generally low and microbiological hazards of these side dishes were comparatively low.

Evaluation of Sanitation Management Practices and Microbiological Quality of Foods in Kindergarten Foodservice Settings (유치원 급식의 위생관리 실태조사 및 미생물적 품질평가)

  • Lee, Joo-Eun;Choi, Kyung-Sook;Kang, Young-Jae;Kwak, Tong-Kung
    • Korean journal of food and cookery science
    • /
    • v.28 no.5
    • /
    • pp.515-530
    • /
    • 2012
  • This research aims to audit foodservice sanitation management practices and to assess microbiological quality of foods and their food contact environments in kindergartens. Sanitation auditing was conducted in 10 kindergartens in Seoul, Gyeonggi, and Incheon areas to assess the levels of safety practices. Results revealed that the surveyed kindergartens scored 41.4 out of 100 points, on average. The average scores of each category were 6.4/11 (58.1%) for facilities sanitation, 4.2/12 (35.0%) for equipment sanitation, 2.4/10 (24.0%) for personal hygiene, 5.1/10 (51.0%) for food ingredients management, 6.0/17 (35.3%) for production process, 5.4/10 (54.0%) for environmental sanitation, 2.0/6 (33.3%) for kitchen utensils sanitation, and 2.2/6 (96.7%) for safety management. Microbiological quality of raw, prepared foods, personal sanitation (hands), environmental sanitation, and drinking water were assessed. Total plate counts (TPC) of the following menus exceeded the critical limit: seasoned leek (5 log CFU/g), cucumber (5.0 log CFU/g), panbroiled fish paste (TNTC at $10^4$), tangpyeongchae (5.3 log CFU/g), egg rolls (6.1 log CFU/g), panbroiled sausage (TNTC at $10^4$), and soft tofu pot stew (TNTC at $10^4$). Coliform which exceeded the standard limit were detected from seasoned leek (2 log CFU/g), cucumber (2.5 log CFU/g), panbroiled fish paste (2.0 log CFU/g), egg roll (3.8 log CFU/g), tangpyeongchae (4.0 log CFU/g), panbroiled sausage (2.3 log CFU/g), and soft tofu pot stew (3.7 log CFU/g). For seasoned foods (muchim), S. aureus ranged 2.2~2.9 log CFU/g. In food workers' hands, microbial profiles ranged 3.8~7.9 log CFU/hand for TPC, ND~4.5 log CFU/hand for coliforms, ND~4.7 log CFU/hand for S. aureus, and ND~5.3 log CFU/hand for Enterobacteriaceae. Microbiological profiles of food contact surface of knives, cutting boards, dish-clothes, and trays showed possibilities of cross-contamination. General bacteria were 2.1~4.5 logCFU/ml in 4 purified water samples and E. coli were found in the kitchen of one kindergarten. These results suggested that environmental sanitation management practices need more strict improvement: effective sanitation education methods and practices were strongly required, and more strict sanitation management for cooking utensils and equipment were required.

A Study on Microbial Management Level of Manufacturing Environment, Raw Meat and Products in HACCP Implemented Meat Market (HACCP 인증 축산물 판매장의 제조 환경 및 식육의 미생물 관리수준에 관한 연구)

  • Cho, Seok-Hyun;Baek, Seung-Hee;Ahn, Jong-Ho;Nam, In-Sik
    • Korean Journal of Organic Agriculture
    • /
    • v.27 no.2
    • /
    • pp.193-204
    • /
    • 2019
  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP) system application on microbial hazard management levels of pork and manufacturing environments. In this study, we compared and analyzed microbial levels in raw meat, finished products, and manufacturing environments (knifes, gloves, and cutting boards) of HACCP and non-HACCP meat markets. In addition, we surveyed the hygiene statuses of HACCP and non-HACCP meat markets. The general bacterial counts in raw meat, finished products, and manufacturing environments were lower in HACCP meat markets than in non-HACCP meat markets. Particularly, non-HACCP meat markets exceeded the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety microbiological recommendation criteria for raw meats (8.7%) and finished products (8.7%). Escherichia coli and coliform counts in raw meat, finished products, and manufacturing environments were also lower in HACCP meat markets than in non-HACCP meat markets. The biological hazard levels of finished products from non-HACCP meat markets were affected by raw meat and manufacturing environment. Moreover, according to questionnaire survey results, personal hygiene, manufacturing environment, and facility standards were lower in non-HACCP meat markets than in HACCP meat markets. Implementation of HACCP at meat markets is expected to minimize food poisoning by reducing the biological hazard levels to provide safe livestock products to consumers.

File System Support for Multimedia Streaming in Internet Home Appliances (인터넷 홈서버를 위한 스트리밍 전용 파일 시스템)

  • 박진연;송승호;진종현;원유집;박승민;김정기
    • Journal of Broadcast Engineering
    • /
    • v.6 no.3
    • /
    • pp.246-259
    • /
    • 2001
  • Due to recent rapid deployment of Internet streaming service and digital broadcasting service, the issue of how to efficiently support streaming workload in so called "Internet Home Appliance" receives prime interests from industry as well as academia. The underlying dilemma is that it may not be feasible to put cutting edge CPU, boards, disks and other peripherals into that type of device. The primary reason is its cost. Usually, Internet Home Appliances has its dedicated usage, e.g. Internet Radio, and thus it does not require high-end CPU nor high-end Va subsystem. The same reasoning applies to I/O subsystem. In Internet Home Appliances dedicated to handle compressed moving picture, it is not equipped with high end SCSI disk with fast rotational speed. Thus, it is mandatory to devise elaborate software algorithm to exploit the available hardware resources and maximize the efficiency of the system. This paper presents our experiences in the design and implementation of a new multimedia file system which can efficiently deliver the required disk bandwidth for a periodic I/O workload. We have implemented the file system on the Linux operating system, and examined itsperformance under streaming I/O workload. The results of the study show that the proposed file system exhibits superior performance than the Linux Ext2 file system under streaming I/O workload. The result of this work not only contribute to advance the state f art file system technology for multimedia streaming but also put forth the software which is readily available and can be deployed. deployed.

  • PDF

A Study on the Cooking and Food Preparation Skills of 5th and 6th Graders in Gangwon Province (강원지역 초등학교 5, 6학년 학생들의 조리활동에 필요한 기초 조리능력 및 식품준비 능력에 관한 연구)

  • Jung, Kyung-Ah
    • Culinary science and hospitality research
    • /
    • v.17 no.3
    • /
    • pp.204-220
    • /
    • 2011
  • of the recipes and 'stir frying' in 76.8% of the recipes. Other cooking methods were used as follows; 'blanching'(24.2%), 'roasting'(22.6%), 'pan frying'(21.0%), 'deep fat frying'(18.7%), etc. The use of 'Boiling' increased significantly(p=0.044) from 4.5% in 2008 to 10.0% in 2010 while the use of 'deep fat frying' decreased significantly(p=0.027) from 21.8% to 10.9%. The frequency of using cooking tools was as follows; knives and cutting boards(100.0%), dishes(92.9%), frypans(91.3%), chopsticks(40.3%), spoons(38.7%), etc. The foods used in cooking were as follows; rice(100.0%), carrots(67.1%), onions(61.9%), eggs(41.6%), paprika(27.7%), kimchi(25.2%), pizza-cheese(22.9%), etc. Natural and processed foods were used in cooking as the ratio of 80:20 approximately. Of the 5 food groups, 'meat fish egg bean' decreased from $24.44{\pm}13.27%$ in 2008 to $20.84{\pm}10.59%$ in 2010, but 'vegetables' increased from $44.38{\pm}15.65%$ to $50.64{\pm}14.07%$ significantly(p<0.05). In conclusion, 5th and 6th graders had an ability to select various foods for their health when cooking even if they have some foods they don't like while they lacked cooking skills such as using various cutting methods and proper cooking tools.

  • PDF

Microbiological Evaluation of Foods and Kitchen Environments in Childcare Center and Kindergarten Foodservice Operations (보육시설과 유치원 급식의 식품 및 환경 미생물의 오염도 평가)

  • Seol, Hye-Rin;Park, Hyoung-Su;Park, Ki-Hwan;Park, Ae-Kyung;Ryu, Kyung
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
    • /
    • v.38 no.2
    • /
    • pp.252-260
    • /
    • 2009
  • Whereas the numbers of childcare centers and kindergartens are increasing rapidly, systematic management to control the food safety of foodservice operation is not yet well established. Samples from 12 centers in Seoul and Gyeonggi Province were collected to assess the microbiological quality of 32 raw materials, 24 cooked foods, 76 food-contact surfaces (knives, cutting boards, dish towels and gloves), 17 employees' hands and 12 air-borne bacteria. The microbiological analyses were performed for aerobic plate counts (APC), Enterobacteriaceae, E. coli and 7 pathogens (B. cereus, C. jejuni, C. perfringens, L. monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., S. aureus, and V. parahaemolyticus). Among raw materials, E. coli ($1.39{\sim}2.08\;\log\;CFU/g$) were detected in 4 out of 6 meats and 7.46 log CFU/g of APC in tofu. High enterobacteriaceae levels of 4.23, 5.14 and 4.19 log CFU/g were found in cucumber salad, steamed spinach with seasonings and steamed bean sprout with seasonings, respectively. No pathogens were found in all samples except for C. perfringens detected from raw spinach and raw lotus root. Only APC and enterobacteriaceae were found in food-contact surfaces. Two of the 23 knives and three of the 24 kitchen boards showed over 500 CFU/$100\;cm^2$ of APC; also, APC levels (5.03 to 5.44 log CFU/g) were detected in 4 of the 12 dish towels. Only one glove showed Enterobacteriaceae (2.44 log CFU/glove) contamination. Enterobacteriaceae were found in 2 employees' hands ($2.37{\sim}4.44\;\log\;CFU$/hand) among the 16 employees. The contamination levels of air-borne bacteria were shown unacceptable in two (2.25 and 2.30 log CFU/petri-film/15 min) out of the 12 kitchen areas. These results suggest that the microbiological hazards in some foods and environments are not well controlled and thus a guideline should be provided to ensure the food safety in childcare center and kindergarten foodservice operations.

Assessment of Food Service Management at Childcare Facilities According to the Number of People Eating Meals (식수인원에 따른 보육시설 급식소 위생관리 수준 평가)

  • Dong Soo Kim;Hyuk Sung Kwon;Pyeong Won Kim;Ja Yeong Lee;Sang Gu Kim;Sang Yun Lee
    • Journal of Food Hygiene and Safety
    • /
    • v.39 no.1
    • /
    • pp.26-34
    • /
    • 2024
  • In this study, the food service management levels of cafeterias in childcare facilities were investigated based on the number of meal recipients and the working status of the kitchen staff. The study included 199 childcare facilities nationwide that received food supplies from the food ingredients distribution company, Pulmuone Foodmerce, from 2021 to 2022. The assessment was conducted using 61 inspection items. The analysis revealed that, as the number of meal recipients and kitchen staff members decreased, the documentation of inspection results was less likely to be conducted (P<0.05). Facilities with fewer meal recipients showed less adequate health status checks for kitchen staff, and those with fewer kitchen staff showed insufficient compliance with hygienic clothing (P<0.05). Additionally, facilities with fewer meal recipients showed a higher frequency of lapses in checking the expiration dates of stored ingredients (P<0.05), requiring increased management attention. They also exhibited the absence of internal temperature measurement records during heating processes (P<0.05). Furthermore, facilities with fewer meal recipients demonstrated inadequate maintenance of kitchen facilities (P<0.05). Significantly higher adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels were detected on the hands and cutting boards of the kitchen staff in facilities with fewer meal recipients and fewer kitchen staff (P>0.05). Overall, facilities with fewer meal recipients exhibited insufficient infrastructure management for kitchen operations and inadequate hygiene management. These results are expected to provide foundational data for the selection of national support programs for childcare facilities in the future.