Another reason to avoid fast food...

Kembudo-Kai Kempoka

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OK. I overheard a training discussion today between a regional manager of a fast food chain, and the store managers he governs, regarding upcoming changes in food handling policies. Quality experience fopr the consumer, while minimizing profit loss through waste. A processes called "tempering" food.

Let me start by saying I struggled with microbiology & pathology in school, at first: I lucked into a private study circle, headed by a guy who worked nights at a path lab, growing cultures and harvesting assays. He tutored us by dragging us around to different places, swabbing samples, then going back to the lab to grow them in agar we helped prepare. Mind blowing, the number of bugs out there, and how prolific they are under warm, moist circumstances with just a little bit of something to snack on while they grow.

So to the discussion I overheard...it seems someone did some research on how happy we are with our burgers, and the temperature of the burger when we get it. Generally, the warmer, the better. The research also concluded that putting condiments on the burger that were out of the fridge lowered the overall temp of the burger 20 degrees by time of consumption. So the solution? Leave stuff out of the fridge for several hours to allow it to come to room temp before using it. Moreover, don't put it back in the fridge; leave it out until a certain point (depending on the food stuff), then toss it and replace it with another, fresher one that has been left out 2 hours to come to room temp.

Some items, according to the regional trainer, can be left out for 48 hours before being discarded. Others, 8 hours (after the additional 2 used to bring it to room temp). Others, 7 days. Lettuce, ortega chili's, mayo and mustard...all these things were discussed in the training, each with a different set of rules around when it went bad, and when it should be tossed. An elaborate method of placing color coded dots on new arrivals to the cooks line, and similar colored dots on a schedule declaring WHEN the marked item should be thrown out was disseminated at this meeting.

This means...

1. Some bunch of food science guys were contracted to see how long you could leave something out before it got so populated by little guys (bacteria our bodies don't like), that it could no longer safely be consumed. They actually determined a safe level of pathogen ingestion; up to some number of bugs X, it's OK to eat. Above X, toss it. This research inevitably required using averages, and tossing out statistical outliers...i.e., what is the average room temp? (what if today is hotter?) How long before the lettuce, at this average room temp, becomes dangerous? (this time would be shortened in warmer climates, with higher humidity, because the bugs would reproduce faster). Colder days and warmer days get averaged in, but then kinda swept to the side in final reports. The experiment would also have operated under safe food handling assumptions, which we will see can't always apply.

2. Some bunch of management geniuses decided this required training for the folks that prepare our food, and manage it while it awaits preparation and consumption.

3. This same bunch of management geniuses figgered that, the subsistence-level minimum wage workers who barely have a functional grasp of English and math were fit to manage the elaborate time management plan around how long food "tempers" (that's the new buzz word for this room temp thing).

OK. How many here have gotten food poisoning from fast food places in the past? Places that did not use this neato method, because it didn't exist? Let me clue you in...if you ate at a fast food, and found yourself later with a tummy-ache and (likely) the trots, you've had some food poisoning. You ate enough bacterium, that the toxins they leave behind caused your body to yell "eject! eject!", and started the process of building a case against the offending food, and eliminating it from the body.

In my study group, we swabbed kitched surfaces at fast foods and nicer restraunts, as well as the usual phone booth handles, computer keyboards, and public toilets. Some of the most rapid and unpleasant cultures were off the FOOD PREPARATION SURFACES OF THE FAST FOOD CHAINS! The conclusion was gross, and simple: You were at less risk of harming yourself by eating a salad tossed in a bus depot urinal, then if you ordered a salad at a fast food.

Why? we pondered...well, it doesn't all just start with hand washing...which, despite signs and frequent reminders, many fast food employes just don't do. The food itself has to pass through processing, from the farm to your serving tray. In those processes, it is exposed to many wee little critters. Cross-contamination from critter-rich foods to previously "clean" foods is also inevitable. Moreover, prep kitchens are warm, and humid (think about the steam, oil, and heat coming from the burger grill): Heaven for bacteria. Now, add the moisture provided by a wiping towel...I have sat and watched as a fast food employee wiped first the trash receptacles, then the pay counter, then the food preparation surfaces with the same towel...burgers prepared on germs just wiped out of the bottom of a stinky trash can. Standard operating procedure?

Of course not...which brings me to my point. Nothing is idiot proof: There will always be a bigger and better idiot to prove the proof incorrect. So now, to keep our burgers warmer while they wait, they have decided to use pre-contaminated foods that have sat out for 48 hours before being jettisoned, trusting that the line cook in charge either gives a crap, or even knows how to tell the 48 hours have come and gone. Having been through micro & path...do you want mayo that is on it's 47th and 1/2 hour? What about the 49th hour, ball dropped because they were in a lunch rush?

This practice is a terrible idea, and unfortunately, the food poisoning most get from food vendors isn't gonna kill you...just make you feel lousy for awhile 'til you kick it out the rear exhaust pipe. Which means no one is going to wrongfully die, causing lawsuits to reverse this absurd practice. We're stuck with it.

Next time you get a burger and fries, enjoy your meal. Because no matter how many people are in the room with you, you are not alone. There are hundreds of thousands of little people on your lettuce, onions, mustard, catsup & mayo, and they were all sharing your meal well before you got to it.

Bon Appetite!

Dr. Dave
 
Yummy yummy crap...

That's a hell of a eye opener... Thank you for posting that. I'm glad my town doesn't have fast food.
 
well.. one BIG reason why people eat junk food is because they're lazy and do not want to cook...
your post is too long for lazy people :D
 
Having worked in fast food in high school (Long John Silver's - and let me tell you, there is nothing like working in a fast food fish restaurant on Good Friday!), things seem to be going downhill - because when I worked there in highschool (1983), the requirements were a lot stricter. I will grant you that most of our food was fish (which goes bad faster than many other things), the slaw was kept refrigerated, and the fries were the only side... but I knew there was a reason besides the low nutritional value that I gave up on McDonald's and it's competitors!
 
I could tell you horror stories....I won't.

I'll simply say, I don't eat at McDonalds or Burger King any more. Period.
Wendys, Subway, DiBellas and Quiznos are it. I hope none of them were the subject of the discussion. lol
 
All I can say is .... Yuck. I did get food poisoning twice from a place I will not name but no burgers were involved (KFC). The bad part is ... I worked there as a teen when this happened.

I don't eat fast food now, because that's one reason. And because I'm vegetarian now (for 4 years). But that post made me GLAD that I don't eat meat now. Phew! I would puke my guts out ..... like I did with the food poisoning ... eeekkk

The only fast food place I eat at now is Subway because they have veggie subs (and they cook there own fresh bread ... here anyways). Other than that, I cook for myself.

I did try a chicken wing about two months ago from a restaruant because I was curious of the "new sauce" they were talking about. It tasted awful (greasy, fried ... bla ... I don't eat/cook fried food either).
 
karatekid1975 said:
A

The only fast food place I eat at now is Subway because they have veggie subs (and they cook there own fresh bread ... here anyways).

all subways do, its part of the franchise, i try not to eat there when i'm not working there..good food, but, not that good...
 
Bob Hubbard said:
I could tell you horror stories....I won't.

I'll simply say, I don't eat at McDonalds or Burger King any more. Period.
Wendys, Subway, DiBellas and Quiznos are it. I hope none of them were the subject of the discussion. lol
Speaking of Subway, on a number of occasions, I have told the employee to change their gloves before returning to preparing my sub after running and picking up the cordless phone. :barf: You have to watch them closely, they will grab the phone or other things that are very nasty without thinking of it. It is so normal to do that, the customers often don't even see it.

:barf:
 
There are a lot of fast-food places near my workplace. It's a busy intersection of a working-class neighborhood. So there's a Subway, Quiznos, Burger King, and Mickey-D's (on all corners save one, which has the bank). With the exception of Quiznos, all those places have had reports of mild food poisoning at one point or another. And to be truly honest, it's only a matter of time before the Q joins them.

S'why I learned to cook and bring my own food to work.
 
Oh man...That sorta reminds me of the time when I worked at a movie theatre.

Hot dogs that were green....
Spider eggs in the popcorn salt...
Should I even mention the ketchup/mustard dispensers...
 
beau_safken said:
Oh man...That sorta reminds me of the time when I worked at a movie theatre.

Hot dogs that were green....
Spider eggs in the popcorn salt...
Should I even mention the ketchup/mustard dispensers...


Nah, I think you painted the picture! :)
 
Boy are some of you in for a surprise when you see how most industrial/mass production foods are produced and handled! :)

I just try not to think about it.
 
About a thousand years ago, I worked in the kitchen of a genuine, 5-star Mobil guide restaraunt in New York;all I can say is that it's good that I can block out the memory of the things that went on there....dreadful, dreadful thinfs

I recommend cultivating a relationship with the owners and management of restaraunts,so as to assure that one's meals are prepared with special care, and only dining at those establishments, or simply never eating out-it's that bad. As for "fast food," my idea of fast food is fruit, or jerky (that I prepare myself.......)
 
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