PowerPoint 262 Food safety © Food – a fact of life 2013.

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Presentation transcript:

PowerPoint 262 Food safety © Food – a fact of life 2013

When cooking It is important to ensure that good practice in food safety and hygiene is being followed to avoid accidents and any risk of food poisoning. © Food – a fact of life 2013

Personal hygiene Before you cook, you should: tie back long hair; roll up long sleeves; wear an apron; remove jewellery; wash your hands. © Food – a fact of life 2013

Storing food When you store food, you should: read the labels – check the date marks and storage instructions; store foods in the right place and eat within the date mark. © Food – a fact of life 2013

Avoiding cross-contamination To keep food safe: do not use the same equipment for raw and cooked foods; keep raw and cooked foods separate, e.g. raw chicken and bread. © Food – a fact of life 2013

Heating and reheating safely To keep food safe: check that food is properly cooked; when reheating, make sure the food is piping hot; only reheat the food once. © Food – a fact of life 2013

Storing cooked food To keep food safe after cooking: cool it down the food as quickly as possible; place it into a suitable container; label it (its name and date). © Food – a fact of life 2013

Waste Be safe when cooking: make sure you have a bin nearby when you cook; collect food waste on newspaper or in a bowl on the table – place in the bin or compost after you have cooked. Always recycle used food packaging. Do not waste food. © Food – a fact of life 2013

Cleaning and washing-up When you cook: keep your cooking area clean and tidy; wash-up equipment in hot soapy water. © Food – a fact of life 2013

© Food – a fact of life 2013 © Food – a fact of life 2013