Sunday, August 4, 2013

Sunday Globe Special: Breakfast in Bed

Not quite.... 

"Food truck popularity outrunning hygiene; Health code violations common, as operators learn how to run eateries out of boxes on wheels" by Deborah Kotz |  Globe Staff, August 04, 2013

Food trucks have rapidly multiplied on Boston streets and plazas, with 75 gourmet-style restaurants on wheels now serving up everything from portobello mushroom paninis to Vietnamese rice bowls. With convenient and relatively cheap food, the trucks often have long lines at lunch.

But 41 percent of these trucks have been cited for food safety violations that put their customers at risk of food poisoning, according to a Globe review of all inspection records since the vast majority of the trucks arrived in the city two years ago....

The biggest problem being no water for hand-washing.

The rate of permit suspensions was much higher for the food trucks than for the city’s 4,000-plus sit-down restaurants and fast-food chains, which had 87 suspensions during the same period.

After a salmonella outbreak recently sickened at least 27 people who ate from Clover’s food trucks and restaurants — all supplied by a single kitchen — some food safety specialists have questioned whether complying with health standards is tougher for food trucks than for traditional brick and mortar restaurants.

Related: Boston Globe Breakfast Truck 

Also see: Slow Saturday Special: School Lunch Truck 

It's enough to make you sick.

“Food trucks have to abide by the same standards as a restaurant to ensure good hygiene practices and adequate temperature control for food storage,” said Lisa Berger, a Boston food safety consultant. But she said frying, chopping, and grilling in a small confined space — typically 24 feet by 8 feet — with a refillable water tank can be tough.

The water supply must be continuously monitored and kept from running dry, and this might discourage workers from adequately washing produce, food-encrusted utensils, or their dirty hands.

“Sometimes they don’t bother to turn the water on before they start prepping for the day,” said Charles Cook, assistant commissioner of the city’s Inspectional Services Department, which issues permits and performs inspections of restaurants and food trucks. “I think it’s the person in charge of the truck needing to be properly trained.”

Still, he said he does not believe food trucks pose any greater food safety risks than restaurants.

Fine, you can go eat at one. What you come to realize over time is that none of the global food supply is secure or safe. That's the price of globalization. You are better off buying local and growing your own, which is why government has such a problem with that.  

Oh, I know the mouthpiece here touts rooftop and community gardens, and the First Lady has her White House garden photo-ops along with her campaign against obesity. That's where the confusion over rainwater and other things comes in.

The city conducts surprise checks on trucks at least once, but preferably twice, a year, which is the same as the practice for restaurants. Those with a history of serious violations will get inspected three times, Cook said. Trucks are also routinely inspected when they park at fairs or farmer’s markets.

Only 10 of the trucks have passed all of their inspections without any violations, and most of these sell cupcakes, cookies, and frozen treats that require no cooking on the truck.

During an inspection of Compliments Food Truck last Tuesday, health inspector Geralda Figueroa first turned on the faucets in the two sinks to test their pressure and water temperature and then stuck a hand thermometer into the raw meatballs in the sandwich cooling station.

Just as owner Kim Crocker was explaining to the inspector that the meatballs were a little warm from being shaped a few minutes before, the power suddenly went out.

“Whoa! What happened to the generator?” Figueroa asked.

Within two minutes, the lights came back. “It was a little nerve-racking. I’m not going to lie,” owner Kim Crocker said in a later interview.

The year-old food truck, parked in City Hall Plaza during the inspection, had no violations on its previous inspection last February, but it required a reinspection this time, after tuna fish in the cooling station measured 45 degrees.

“It needs to be kept at 41 degrees or below,” said Figueroa as she made a “fail” note in her report. She also cited the truck owners for not chilling a container of marinated mushrooms quickly enough and recommended that Crocker prepare the dish in her Brookline commissary, rather than on the truck, to ensure that it’s rapidly cooled in a device called a blast chiller.

Crocker said that she will follow that advice and will also keep her cooling station set at a lower temperature. “It’s always great to have inspectors to teach you things.”

I think I'm done with this meal because it is really starting to taste like shit. 

That is one of the main missions of Inspectional Services, agreed Daniel Prendergast, the city’s principal health inspector....

Food truck owners, who must employ at least one food protection manager certified via an exam, face a tricky challenge each morning to make sure the prepared foods they load from the commissary onto the truck are all at the appropriate “holding” temperatures and that they remain that way during the day....

A lack of water supply and improper food storage are likely the two biggest food safety challenges on food trucks, which often stem from broken equipment, said Berger, the food safety consultant.

James DiSabatino, owner of Roxy’s, cited malfunctioning generators as a major issue he’s had to deal with during the past three years. “If the power is off for more than five minutes, we shut down for the day,” he said.

An equipment problem also was a factor when an inspector found no running water on one of his trucks in January.

“It was 10 degrees outside on that day, and our water heater had cracked from the cold,” DiSabatino said. “We now know how to make a temporary hand wash, which the inspector taught us how to do.”

I'm sorry, folks, but I'm sick of the good-government looking out for your health shit shovel today. Go tell it to the compounders. Never mind all the looting based on lies, the ever-expanding tyranny (for your own protection, of course), the crumbling infrastructure, etc, etc. Let's all hit the food truck!

Frequent inspections of his trucks, he added, have improved his relationships with city health inspectors to the point where he feels comfortable calling them with questions.

Yeah, like that a-hole clean for 'em. Folks, I worked in restaurants, and I never met an owner who was happy to hear the health inspector was in town.

Roy Costa, a Florida food safety consultant who previously worked in that state’s health department for two decades, said food trucks are very difficult to regulate compared to restaurants. “It’s more difficult to operate these units safely since they’re fraught with mechanical problems.”

A lack of access to bathrooms on the truck may also foster poor hygienic practices. “Where do they go? Inspectors don’t have control over that,” Costa said, as they do in restaurants. 

EXCUSE ME? 

And no way to wash the hands?

But such concerns don’t seem to phase food truck patrons, judging by the size of the lunchtime crowds lining up to order from Compliments and two other food trucks parked at City Hall Plaza last Tuesday....

Yeah, mmmmmm, good!

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