How to prevent cross-contamination and cross-contact in commercial kitchens

How to prevent cross-contamination and cross-contact in commercial kitchens
Heading out for a meal is meant to be an enjoyable experience, but it can quickly turn into a nightmare if a commercial kitchen has failed in its duty to manage cross-contamination and cross-contact risks. In this article, one shot drain cleaner supplier Fulcare explores the difference between these two risks and how they can be successfully managed.

Defining cross-contamination

Cross-contamination can lead to illness in consumers. It occurs when bacteria or other potentially harmful microorganisms are unintentionally transferred from one place to another, in this case, from one food item to another. There are three main ways cross-contamination can occur:

  1. Equipment to food — for example, using a knife to cut raw meat, then the same knife to cut vegetables.
  2. Food to food — for example, if raw meat touches cooked meat in storage.
  3. People to food — for example, handling raw meat then proceeding to handle cooked meat without washing hands.

Defining cross-contact

Cross-contact is a little difference from cross-contamination. This is when foods mix proteins after coming into contact with each other. Instead of bacteria being the problems as with cross-contamination, the problem here is the trace element of another food item being present. Usually, the amount is so small that it cannot be seen. But for people who are highly allergic to certain food items, even a trace element of that food can be enough to trigger a reaction.

Cross-contamination makes people sick. Cross-contact causes allergic reactions.

Commercial kitchen responsibilities

Any firm that deals with food for consumption has a duty of care for its customers. According to the government website, complying with food safety laws requires businesses to follow food hygiene practises. It outlines that it is the business’ responsibility to prevent any items that come into contact with food from transferring anything to the food substance, as well as having traceability of any such food contact materials.

Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point principles (HAACP) are in place for companies to create processes around. HAACP requires businesses to identify and avoid, remove, or reduce any hazard to food, as well as monitoring any critical control points along the supply chain. Employers are also expected to train staff on hygiene practises, though this can be a formal programme or informal training.

In order to reduce cross-contact, customers must alert their waiter. The business should be able to inform the customer of any allergen risks in this instance.

Avoiding cross-contamination

There are methods to reducing cross-contamination risks. Key areas include:

  • Tie hair back — or wear a hairnet.
  • Avoid eating or drinking — when preparing food, staff should not be allowed to eat or drink.
  • Hand washing — before working with food, staff should wash their hands. Hands should also be washed prior to handling any food, and after handling or touching any raw meat, fish, eggs, or unwashed vegetables. Hands should be washed after going to the toilet, using phones or touching light switches, door handles, cash registers, or money. Also, hands should be washed after carrying out other tasks such as emptying or touching bins or tending to a cut or wound.
    • Proper hand-washing technique has been outlined by the Food Standards Agency as:
      • Wet hands thoroughly under warm water
      • Squirt liquid soap onto palm
      • Rub to a lather
      • Rub the palm of one hand over the back of the other hand and fingers. Repeat with other hand.
      • Put palms together and interlock fingers. Rub in-between fingers.
      • Rub around thumbs, then rub fingertips against palms.
      • Rinse off soap with clean water and dry on a disposable towel. Turn tap off with the towel and dispose of towel.
    • Wear clean clothes — aprons should also be worn, especially when handling unwrapped food.
    • Remove jewellery and watches — bacteria can be caught in the nooks of watches or jewellery.
    • Clean preparation — avoid coughing, sneezing, or touching your face over food.
    • Tend to any cuts — cuts should be covered by a brightly coloured waterproof plaster.

Tell your staff not to wash raw meat. Some people believe washing raw meat rinses off bacteria, but it actually increases the risk of food poisoning. The splashing water from the meat being rinsed under the tap can travel more than 50cm away from the source, which in turn, carries bacteria all around the room. Washing raw meat effectively spreads the germs around.

By using separate equipment and utensils, you can also lower the risk of cross-contamination. Have separate equipment for each type of food; raw red meat should have its own set of cutting boards, containers, knives, etc. Vegetables would have their own set, and raw poultry its own set, and so on. A common method of implementation is to have a colour coded system in the kitchen, for example, red utensils, boards, and containers are used for raw meat, green for vegetables, and so on.

Be sure to inspect equipment and replace when necessary. Bacteria can hide away in the crevices and cracks of cutting boards, and these should be replaced. Also, consider ‘hidden’ contact too — can opener blades touch food when they enter a can, so don’t forget to clean these too! Of course, correct cleaning of utensils is a given. All work surfaces and equipment should be thoroughly cleaned after use. This means warm water, soap, the works — rinsing is not enough. Invest in good-quality wholesale cleaning products and make sure the kitchen is more than rinsed down!

The storage of equipment is important too. Clean dishes and utensils, once cool, should be stored on clean shelves away from floor level. Avoid towel drying dishes as this can cause contamination from towels.

Avoiding cross-contact

It is a little more difficult to avoid cross-contact. Many of the same practises used for avoiding cross-contamination work for reducing the risk of cross-contact too. Washing hands in the method stated above, cleaning surfaces and equipment between each task, separate utensils for different food types, all of these methods work to help reduce cross-contact too. So, when staff wash their hands after handling fish, for example, as recommended to do so to avoid cross-contamination, they will also reduce the risk of cross-contact of the fish proteins to the next food item they prepare. The top eight allergens as listed by FARE are milk, wheat, eggs, soy, shellfish, peanuts, tree nuts, and fish. But they also stress that more than 170 foods have been known to cause an allergic reaction.

It’s a matter of proteins and bacteria and the difference in dealing with them. Where proper cooking will usually remove all bacteria on contaminated food, cooking will not remove trace elements of food proteins that have been cross-contacted. This must be dealt with accordingly: where possible, use different counters and cooking equipment for different food types, such a separate grill for fish and another for meat. If this is not possible, you must make customers aware of this. Consider the case of McDonald’s — recently, the fast food chain has launched a wrap that is, ingredient-wise, vegan friendly. Though the food item itself contains no animal products, it is toasted in the same toaster that their other buns do, which contain milk. As such, there is a risk of cross-contact of milk proteins from the buns to the toaster and to the vegan wraps. The chain has marked the wraps as vegetarian rather than vegan in order to accommodate for this.

Understanding the difference between cross-contact and cross-contamination is crucial in handling the issues effectively. Ensuring your kitchen maintains a high level of attention to potential risks will keep your customers feeling safe and comfortable!