But they do handle your food! If you only knew what goes on in the back of a lot of restaurants it would shock you.
Most restaurants are filthy. The only time they are not is when the food inspectors are going to visit.
are they not random?
But they do handle your food! If you only knew what goes on in the back of a lot of restaurants it would shock you.
Most restaurants are filthy. The only time they are not is when the food inspectors are going to visit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssktVpcv9WIIn California most chefs and cooks DO NOT wear gloves and any attempts to require such has been blocked due the efforts of the restaurant industry. Just so you know when you dine out in California your chef could be touching your food with the hands he used to wipe you know what.
I did the food industry too. Costumers better be seeing gloved hands.
I guess that would depend on the area. Where I lived food inspectors would schedule visits, so you always knew when they would show up.are they not random?
In California most chefs and cooks DO NOT wear gloves and any attempts to require such has been blocked due the efforts of the restaurant industry. Just so you know when you dine out in California your chef could be touching your food with the hands he used to wipe you know what.
Yea on the exterior of the food and then its instantly vaporized the moment it lands in the oven or a hot plate or concentrated salt or concentrated fats or concentrated sugars.
Sue happy Americans. I went out to a Japanese all you can eat buffet last week in Bangkok. We prepped our own food. We had a grill for cooking our meats, and a pot for cooking our soup. And all of this goodness was on our table.
Try to do that in America. You can't because someone would do something stupid, get injured and would want to sue.
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They handle food even after it is cooked you know.
Sue happy Americans. I went out to a Japanese all you can eat buffet last week in Bangkok. We prepped our own food. We had a grill for cooking our meats, and a pot for cooking our soup. And all of this goodness was on our table.
Try to do that in America. You can't because someone would do something stupid, get injured and would want to sue.
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There is a Korean place like that right near my work....in North Carolina.
My mom was in the restaurant business for 25 years. She didn't wear gloves and the reason was she needed to touch the food before she prepared it. We were one of the cleanest restaurants in the area. Everything was bleached at the end of the day. The slicer was torn apart and cleaned. If it was old it was thrown out. Nothing was reused. EVER. Our food was prepped daily to ensure freshness. We even used individual tuna containers while other restaurants used the big restaurant style tuna cans. Tuna goes bad easily, but to save money most people overlook this. If it does go bad they just scoop the slime off the top and reuse the tuna. Nasty!
If you guys only knew just how nasty most restaurants are you would never eat out. I knew people who would even reuse the fries that people didn't eat so they could save money.
I still think we have way to many regulations. Germs aren't going to kill you. This picture was just taken in Bangkok, Thailand. Its how they wash their dishes at the outside food stalls. Can you imagine the soot and car exhaust that must cover the dishes. People eat at the food stalls all the time, and they haven't had an outbreak of deaths.
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Street food there is the best to. I need to go back.
Wash, wash, wash. Always be washing.
Clean hands are much safer than the illusion of cleanliness that plastic gloves provide.
THIS.
I am more comfortable when I see staff without gloves.
There is really no difference between your skin and a glove. If you touch raw chicken with a glove, your glove is in the same state as your hand if you touch raw chicken with it.
Making staff wear gloves provides a false sense of safety.
Bare hands, and wash them often. Follow standard food safety procedures (don't touch raw chicken and then plate a cooked dish without washing etc), and you'll be fine.
this is ridiculous. they passed a gloves rule here in sf and i think they just got rid of it. clammy hands inside gloves are way nastier than someone touchin ur food. also even if a cook goes to the bathroom and doesnt wash his hands before making ur food, his hands are still cleaner than the chicken or beef that was crapping all over itself a week earlier or the veggies that just got pissed and shat on in the field all season by the farm worker who didnt feel like walking to the official bathroon
The problem is that you are assuming they wash their hands properly after touching raw chicken. It is far more convenient simply to toss the gloves and put on a fresh pair than the spend 2 minutes washing your hands properly. Cross contamination is a big deal, and I'm sure it happens far more often than you think.