Sandwich artists? Florida Subway temporarily shut down after 40+ rodent droppings discovered near food

The ABC Action News I-Team uncovered last week that Subway at 696 S. Gulfview Blvd. in Clearwater Beach had to temporarily close after the state discovered over 40 rodent droppings underneath the storage rack, on top of boxes, underneath the sink, inside a bin, and near the soda syrup dispensers.

subwayOn Dec. 21 the state also issued a stop sale on 28 packages of chips after finding they were not in a ‘wholesome, sound condition.’

In addition, food safety issues written up in the inspection include potentially hazardous food thawed at room temperature with two tuna packages and two meat packages on the back prep table thawing, Subway’s manager lacking proof of a food manager certification, and employees failing to wash their hands before putting on gloves to work with food and failing to wash prior to heading to the front line to work.

More hand washing concerns include the hand wash sink not accessible for employees to use due to bread baking holders stored in the sink and no paper towels provided.

The state has warned this Clearwater Beach Subway before about high priority violations. In September, the state found no hot water in the facility for employees to wash their hands, no soap, no paper towels and a long list of potentially hazardous cold food held at greater than 41° Fahrenheit.

 

Pakistan’s food safety czar declares ‘war’ on unhygienic food

Philip Reeves of NPR’s The Salt blog writes that as soon as the pink-clad Ayesha Mumtaz steps out of her car, word of her arrival spreads along the street like a forest fire. Storekeepers begin shooing away customers, hauling down the shutters, and heading into the shadows in the hope that Mumtaz’s scrutinizing eye will not fall on them.

lahore-2-adb5dcb691d4f1ce4aae4bb6275ee03a966a082b-s1100-c15These traders would sooner lose business than risk a visit from a woman whose campaign to clean up the kitchens and food factories of Pakistan has made her a national celebrity, nicknamed “The Fearless One.”

Today, Mumtaz has come to a crowded alley in Lahore, a city with a long history of producing splendid South Asian cuisine, but with a less distinguished record of worrying about how food reaches the plate.

She is here to fire a fresh volley in her self-declared “war” against unhygienic food, by raiding a backstreet business that makes cakes, sweets and desserts for wholesale. Her target is a crumbling concrete house where the cooking takes place in the yard.

Mumtaz marches through the iron gate and begins rummaging around the big grubby pots and fly-blown cans of gooey liquid that seem to be lying around haphazardly. The place is strewn with dirty containers, grimy rags and rusty tin cans.

“You see the cleanliness of the utensils?” Mumtaz asks scathingly, as she holds up a giant spoon, crusted with filth. She reaches under a bench and hauls out a container littered with moldy scraps of cake.

It is “really horrible” that consumers are unaware the cakes and sweets that they’re buying over the counter are produced amid such squalor, says Mumtaz. She glares at the owner, who watches on in sullen silence.

Six months ago Mumtaz, 38, took over as operations director of the Punjab Food Authority, a government agency tasked with ensuring that the food served to Pakistan’s most populous province is hygienic and unadulterated.

Punjab has a population that is more than double that of California. Lahore, the provincial capital, has a vast array of food outlets, as you’d expect in a city whose relish for food is legendary.

 

‘The headaches are all gone, and it’s morning in this song’

From the song, Hawaii, by Canadian icons, Max Webster.

Last day on the beach at Coolangatta. The pork and apples I had for dinner were decent, but I didn’t order a side of sprouts.

pork.sprouts.dec.15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The beach on the Pacific Ocean, 4:30 a.m. A few surfers already out, but not going to get much on this calm morning.

coolangatta.beach.dec.15

‘Never made anyone sick’ Philly edition, as inspectors crack down

Sam Wood writes for Philly.com: The health department last week sharply rebuked several well-known Philadelphia eateries  — and ordered four to temporarily close — following routine and unannounced inspections.

midtown11The Midtown II diner, Federal Donuts, Dirty Franks, Milkboy, and Godiva Chocolatier each received stinging assessments from health inspectors. Some eatery managers and owners groused that the inspectors have become unnecessarily tough.

“I think it’s all baloney,” said Gus Hionas, owner of the Midtown II at 122 S. 11th Street in Center City. “This place has been open 24 hours a day for 43 years. I’ve never poisoned anyone or made anyone sick. This is a disgrace what they’re doing.”

Midtown II was cited Dec. 17 for a total of 32 violations, 18 of which were noted as serious risk factors. Some food safety professionals consider having two violations as being too many. At Midtown II, serious infractions included an employee touching ready to eat food with her bare hands, encrusted food debris on kitchen equipment, severely dented canned items and improperly stored food that was being held in “danger zone” temperatures prone to breeding toxic bacteria.

“I know what needs to be done and what’s not to be done,” Hionas said after a reporter read him the list of violations. “It’s ridiculous. Most of what they say makes no sense.”

Federal Donuts, the celebrated mecca of deep-fried joy at 16th and Sansom Streets, was dinged Dec. 17 for 12 infractions. Five of the violations are technically considered serious risk factors, but most diners would question the seriousness of an employee leaving a cup on a counter or an employee “improperly drinking” from a water bottle actually could be.

Steve Cook, co-owner of the five-restaurant chicken and donut empire, said inspectors seemed to be under pressure from health department superiors to come down harder on restauranteurs.

“Since the Joy Tsin Lau incident they’ve decided to really get tough,” Cook said, referring to the episode early this year where 100 lawyers and law students were sickened following a banquet at a Chinatown restaurant. “We’re not perfect, but why are they giving us such a hard time?

100 hospitalized after food poisoning outbreak at UK Chinese restaurant where rotting meat left in sink

One hundred diners were hospitalized with food poisoning at a filthy Chinese restaurant in July 2014.

ral.china.uk.salmScores of sick customers who had eaten at the Real China had to be rushed to A&E following an outbreak of Salmonella.

Southampton Magistrates’ Court heard shocked inspectors found hunks of raw meat left in a sink and dirty tea towels dumped on the kitchen floor of the restaurant in Eastleigh, Hampshire.

Now those involved with the restaurant at the time have been hit with £70,000 in fines and costs, after what was reportedly the biggest food poisoning outbreak the borough council has ever seen.

Akkora Management, who run the restaurant, and director Zudong Liu admitted 15 offences of failing to comply with EU laws relating to food safety and hygiene.

The company was given a fine of £30,000, Liu a further £21,500 and £22,000 in costs was also ordered, the Daily Echo reports.

The Real China is now under new management.

Florida Costco failed inspection for live roaches near food and temperature violations

The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Division of Food safety just failed the Costco Warehouse at 10921 Causeway Blvd in Brandon this week.

costco.beach.towelOn Monday, December 14, food safety inspectors observed live roaches in the ‘Club Demonstration Services’ area, food storage, and ware-washing room. That demo room was given a ‘Stop Use Order’ and not allowed to reopen until inspectors return for a follow-up inspection and approve its been adequately cleaned and sanitized.

Also during their visit, food safety inspectors issued a temporary stop sale on various food items due to dangerous temperature issues with five pounds of crab legs at 55-degrees and one pound of sausage at 46-degrees. Cold food should be maintained at 41 degrees or below. 

Both had to be placed on ice to bring down the temperature before they could be released to be sold.

ABC Action News anchor Wendy Ryan spoke to Craig Wilson, the vice president of food safety for Costco. He told her over the phone that the ‘Demo Room’ was shut down due to the pest issue, so they immediately called EcoLab for treatment to get rid of the roaches and make sure they did not come back.

Wilson also explained that they sanitized and cleaned the area completely, and they’re now waiting on food safety inspectors to return so the room can be used again.s

Wilson said that Costco works 100 percent with the health department and looks forward to things getting back to the way they should be.

Soundbites over science: Chipotle’s ‘diarrhea burrito’ and a culture of arrogance

I had my go at Chipotle on Friday. Here’s some other views.

diarrhea burrito’Brian Sozzi of Real Money writes that from blasting McDonald’s and the fast-food industry on earnings calls, to a company spokesman e-mailing me all of the harmful ingredients that McDonald’s uses to giving a figurative middle finger to competitors in online marketing videos, members of Chipotle’s top brass have gotten a big head.

I believe they have lost their sense of humility.

I encourage them to take a trip to Starbucks (SBUX) in Seattle and sit down with CEO Howard Schultz. That guy exudes humility. Sure, Schultz is known to get riled up on earnings calls when his baby is criticized by a stock analyst, but I have not once heard him disparage competitors on earnings calls or take success for granted. When that humility is lost among executives, it puts the company in a position to be attacked when times get tough — as they are at Chipotle now. Frankly, it just leads to operational miscues.

chipotle.gmoEach and every Chipotle leader needs to look within today and reassess their attitudes — the CFO, for example, should be embarrassed by how he handled himself at this week’s investor’s conference. The guy made it sound as if the media secretly planted E. coli at Chipotle locations across the country to cook up desktop and mobile traffic in the last month of the year.

Even Steve Ells’ performance on the “Today” show Thursday lacked authenticity. I watched that appearance 11 times. The stock may have rallied on the apology, but if you bought Chipotle’s stock on the news, I encourage going back to watch the footage: The culture of arrogance is still there, and it has to be eradicated at a chain growing as quickly as Chipotle.

Norovirus in Boston because of a sick worker? Operational neglect. Closing a Seattle restaurant Thursday due to food not being kept hot enough? Operational neglect.

Five outbreaks in six months?

Seattle suffered the first E. coli cases in July, followed by almost 100 cases of norovirus in California’s Simi Valley the following month.

Chipotle restaurants in Minnesota infected around 70 people with Salmonella in September, and over 140 Boston College students were confirmed with norovirus earlier this week. And there was another outbreak of E. coli that was not publicly known until recently. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in its latest count cited 52 cases of E. coli in nine states, the majority of which were reported in Washington and Oregon.

I’ve been doing this since the Jack in the Box outbreak of 1993 and the number of possible cases in such a short period of time is something I’ve never really seen before,” said William Marler of the Seattle-based Marler Clark LLP.

Chipotle, which has 1,900 locations nationwide, closed 43 stores in the two states before reopening them following deep cleaning and inspections by local health officials. The Brighton, Mass., restaurant near the B.C. campus also shuttered as local health agencies investigate the outbreak, The Boston Globe reported.

Chipotle’s stock dropped nearly 30% from August to December, according to CNN Money. But the shares gained some ground back after Chipotle founder and co-CEO Steve Ells pledged to make the restaurant “the safest place to eat” Thursday on NBC’s “Today” show.

chipotle.new.food.safeDarin Detwiler, senior policy coordinator at STOP Foodborne Illness and an adjunct professor in the regulatory affairs of food and the food industry department at Boston’s Northeastern University, said cooking fresh ingredients in traditional ways is no excuse. “Don’t you and I do that at home?” he asks. “If I am cooking for my family, I’m responsible.”

While it’s clear that using canned and frozen foods could make it easier for Chipotle to meet food safety standards, a diverse supply chain shouldn’t stop the company from meeting regulatory requirements. “It may be more challenging that you have to tell more people to pay attention, but that’s really not that much of a challenge,” says Doug Powell, a former food safety professor and the publisher of the food-safety-focused Barf Blog. “You put in place your standard operating procedures, you have your plans, you go ahead and do it.”

Timothy B. Lee of Vox writes that rather than pandering to groundless fears about GMO safety, Chipotle would have served its customers better by focusing on the very real dangers of food tainted with E. coli, norovirus, or salmonella. Theoretically, it should be able to do both, of course, but like any organization Chipotle has limited resources. A dollar it spends guarding against the overblown threat of GMOs is a dollar it can’t devote to preventing actual health problems.

Roaches found at Guatemalan restaurant in Georgias

A Guatemalan restaurant in Chamblee had eight critical food safety violations, plus roaches in the kitchen and the cooler during a recent routine health inspection.

Guatemalteco El Quetzal, 5522 New Peachtree Road, ChambleeThe DeKalb County health inspector observed both adult and nymph roaches in the facility, but when asked to see the latest pest service report, only the service agreement was available.

Restaurant Guatemalteco El Quetzal, 5522 New Peachtree Road, Chamblee, scored 45/U. Previous scores were 77/C and 76/C.

Points were taken off because potentially hazardous foods were not being protected.

Raw meat was thawing at room temperature instead of under running water or inside a cooler.

Cooked plantains and potatoes were cooling at room temperature instead of in an ice bath or walk-in cooler. The foods were not within cooling time and temperature requirements either, the inspector noted.

Raw beef was stored above cooked tamales in the walk-in cooler.

In other code violations, an employee rinsed hands without soap in the four-compartment sink. An employee’s open drink was stored near clean dishes.

Cutting boards were pitted, grooved and stained. They were discarded during the inspection.

Bulk foods, taken out of their original containers, were not labeled in their new containers.

From bad to worse: 30 sick linked to Boston Chipotle

Ten players from the Boston College men’s basketball team have possibly been stricken with E. coli, along with 20 other students, all possibly linked to the Cleveland Circle Chipotle Mexican Grill (turns out it was Norovirus).

chipotle.ad.2Chipotle said it had temporarily closed the restaurant.

Shares in the company fell another 6 per cent.

“We do not have any evidence to suggest that this incident is related to the previous E. coli incident,” Chipotle spokesman Chris Arnold said in an email. “There are no confirmed cases of E. coli connected to Chipotle in Massachusetts.”

Boston College officials sent alerts on Monday to students, informing them of the suspected food poisoning.

The time between ingesting E. coli bacteria and feeling sick is usually three to four days, but may be as short as one day or as long as 10 days, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Symptoms often begin slowly with mild belly pain or non-bloody diarrhea that worsens over several days.

Restaurateur calls NZ council ‘racist and crazy’ after bad inspection

Mountain Scene reports a war of words has erupted between one of Queenstown’s worst-rated eateries and the local council.

mandarin.1.nzMandarin manager Anna Chan accuses the council of being “racist and crazy” over a recent complaint – and subsequent inspection – against the D-graded, Beach Street restaurant.

But the council bites back, saying food safety is color blind.

Mandarin diners complained of an insect in rice and part of a chicken foot in their honey chicken, according to a council report.

They also raised concerns of smelly seafood rice and dirty fish tanks.

Speaking to Mountain Scene through a translator, manager Anna Chan says she thinks council is “racist and crazy.”

She also reckons the report isn’t accurate.

“We don’t use chicken feet in the restaurant at all so I don’t know where the chicken foot came from.

“We also wash the rice three or four times before we cook it, so I don’t know what kind of insect it was – or where that would come from.”

mandarin.2.nzCouncil regulatory boss Lee Webster isn’t happy with the slur; food safety is color blind as are we, he says.

He stresses all issues relate to food safety and hygiene deficiencies.

Council staffer Rachel Rose’s report shows prepared foods in the chiller with no dates, boxes of squid and beef fillet left to defrost at room temperature, fridge temperatures not monitored for over a week and open bags of ingredients in the dry store.

The report stresses bosses need to take complaints seriously, but notes the premises was generally in a reasonable standard of cleanliness.

Chan disagrees with the overall assessment.

Explaining the lack of labels, she says veg cut in the morning are all used daily. On defrosting meat, it doesn’t exceed time limit guidelines when defrosting at room temperature. As for the lack of fridge temperature records, Chan reckons the council made an error when looking at the clipboard.

Chan firmly believes council doesn’t like them – and that is the reason for a D grade.