Duyệt tất cả câu hỏi

Mọi câu hỏi kèm đáp án và giải thích — học theo chủ đề hoặc tất cả cùng lúc.

Contamination & Hygiene

40 câu hỏi
1. A prep cook slices raw chicken and then, without cleaning, uses the same cutting board and knife to slice tomatoes for a salad. This is an example of which type of hazard?
a.Chemical contamination
b.Physical contamination
c.Biological cross-contamination
d.Time abuse

Transferring pathogens from raw chicken to a ready-to-eat food is biological cross-contamination. Raw poultry carries bacteria such as Salmonella and Campylobacter that will not be cooked off the salad. The board and knife must be washed, rinsed, and sanitized between tasks, or separate color-coded equipment must be used.

2. Which of the following is an example of a physical contaminant in food?
a.Norovirus on a worker's hands
b.A metal shaving or piece of glass in a dish
c.Cleaning solution sprayed near food
d.Bacteria growing in the danger zone

Physical contamination is a hard or foreign object in food, such as glass, metal shavings, bandage fragments, or bones. Norovirus and bacteria are biological hazards, and cleaning solution is a chemical hazard. Physical hazards can cause cuts or choking and must be prevented by inspecting food and keeping equipment maintained.

3. A dishwasher stores a spray bottle of degreaser on the shelf directly above the bin of clean lettuce. What hazard does this create?
a.Chemical contamination of the food
b.Physical contamination of the food
c.A biological hazard only
d.No hazard as long as the bottle is labeled

Storing chemicals above or beside food risks chemical contamination if the bottle leaks, drips, or is knocked over. Cleaning chemicals must always be stored below and away from food, utensils, and food-contact surfaces. Labeling the bottle is required but does not remove the danger of a spill onto the lettuce.

4. In a walk-in cooler, on which shelf should raw ground beef be stored to prevent cross-contamination?
a.On the top shelf, above all other foods
b.On the same shelf as ready-to-eat salads
c.Anywhere, as long as it is covered
d.On a lower shelf, below ready-to-eat foods and produce

Raw meats are stored below ready-to-eat foods so their juices cannot drip down and contaminate them. Foods are arranged top to bottom by their minimum cooking temperature, with raw ground beef (155°F) and raw poultry (165°F) near the bottom. Ready-to-eat foods and produce always go on the top shelves.

5. Which of the following is one of the Big 9 major food allergens that must be disclosed to guests?
a.Corn
b.Garlic
c.Sesame
d.Cane sugar

The Big 9 major allergens are milk, eggs, fish, shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, soy, and sesame. Sesame was added as the ninth major allergen. Corn, garlic, and cane sugar are not among the major allergens that must be identified for guests.

6. A guest tells the server she has a severe peanut allergy. What is the correct action?
a.Tell the kitchen so they can prepare the dish with clean, sanitized equipment and check every ingredient
b.Simply remove the visible peanuts from the finished plate
c.Assure her the dish is fine because peanuts are not a main ingredient
d.Serve the dish but warn her to eat slowly

For an allergen request, staff must confirm the dish and its ingredients, use clean and sanitized utensils and surfaces, and prevent any contact with the allergen. Removing visible peanuts does not remove peanut protein already transferred to the food. Even trace amounts can trigger a life-threatening reaction, so the whole preparation must be allergen-safe.

7. Cross-contact of an allergen is BEST described as:
a.Cooking a food below its minimum internal temperature
b.Transferring an allergen from a food or surface to a food that did not contain it
c.Holding food too long in the danger zone
d.Using expired ingredients in a recipe

Cross-contact happens when an allergen is transferred to a food that should be free of it, for example using the same fryer oil, spatula, or cutting board. Unlike cooking, cleaning does not always destroy allergen proteins, so surfaces and utensils must be washed and sanitized between uses. This protects guests with allergies from a dangerous exposure.

8. Under NYC rules, when a worker prepares ready-to-eat food such as a sandwich or salad, how may they handle it?
a.With clean bare hands only
b.With bare hands after washing for 10 seconds
c.With bare hands as long as they use hand sanitizer
d.Using single-use gloves, tongs, deli tissue, or other utensils — no bare-hand contact

NYC prohibits bare-hand contact with ready-to-eat food; workers must use gloves, tongs, deli tissue, or other utensils. This barrier keeps pathogens from hands, such as Norovirus and Hepatitis A, off food that will not be cooked again. Handwashing is still required before putting on gloves or handling any utensils.

NYC Health Code Article 81
9. A cook at a deli is about to build several ready-to-eat wraps by hand because the tongs are dirty. What should the supervisor do?
a.Allow it since the cook washed his hands
b.Allow it if the cook works quickly
c.Stop the cook and provide clean gloves or utensils before touching the ready-to-eat food
d.Allow it only for the first wrap

Ready-to-eat food in NYC must never be touched with bare hands, even freshly washed ones. The supervisor must supply clean single-use gloves or clean utensils before any wraps are assembled. Working fast or doing just one by hand does not meet the no-bare-hand-contact rule.

NYC Health Code Article 81
10. How long should a food worker scrub their hands with soap during proper handwashing?
a.At least 20 seconds
b.About 5 seconds
c.At least 2 minutes
d.Just long enough to see suds

Hands must be scrubbed vigorously with soap for at least 20 seconds, covering the backs of hands, between fingers, and under the nails. The whole process — wet, soap, scrub 20 seconds, rinse, and dry with a single-use towel — should take about 40 seconds. Five seconds is far too short to remove pathogens.

NYC Health Code Article 81
11. Which sequence describes correct handwashing steps?
a.Rinse, dry, apply soap, scrub
b.Wet hands, apply soap, scrub at least 20 seconds, rinse, dry with a single-use towel
c.Apply sanitizer, wipe on apron, rinse
d.Soap, scrub 5 seconds, shake dry

Correct handwashing is: wet hands with warm running water, apply soap, scrub all surfaces for at least 20 seconds, rinse thoroughly, and dry with a single-use paper towel or hand dryer. Drying on an apron or clothing re-contaminates the hands. Hand sanitizer may be used only after washing, never in place of it.

NYC Health Code Article 81
12. Which of the following is a moment when a food worker MUST wash their hands?
a.Only at the start of the shift
b.Only after using the restroom
c.Once every two hours regardless of activity
d.After using the restroom, handling raw meat, touching the face or hair, and before putting on gloves

Handwashing is required after using the restroom, handling raw food, touching the body/hair/face, taking out garbage, coughing or sneezing, eating or smoking, and before starting work or putting on gloves. Washing only once per shift or only after the restroom leaves many contamination points uncovered. Gloves are put on over freshly washed hands.

NYC Health Code Article 81
13. A cashier handles money and then, without washing, goes to plate ready-to-eat pastries with tongs. What is the problem?
a.Hands must be washed after handling money before returning to food tasks
b.There is no problem because tongs are used
c.Money is sanitized so no washing is needed
d.The cashier only needs to use hand sanitizer

Money is dirty and can carry pathogens, so hands must be washed after handling it before touching food or food equipment. Even though tongs will be used, contaminated hands can transfer pathogens to the tongs and food-contact surfaces. Hand sanitizer alone does not replace washing after a contaminating task.

NYC Health Code Article 81
14. A line cook is eating a snack and drinking from an open cup while standing at the prep station. What does NYC food-safety practice require?
a.It is allowed if the cook stands to the side
b.It is allowed with a lid only
c.No eating, drinking from open containers, or smoking is permitted in food-prep areas
d.It is allowed during slow periods

Eating, drinking from open containers, chewing gum, and smoking are prohibited in food preparation and dishwashing areas because saliva and hands can contaminate food. Workers may drink only from a covered container with a straw in a designated area away from food. These activities must be done on breaks in a separate location.

NYC Health Code Article 81
15. A food worker has a diagnosed case of vomiting and diarrhea. What should the manager do?
a.Assign the worker to wash dishes only
b.Exclude the worker from the establishment until symptom-free and cleared per the rules
c.Let the worker cook if they wear gloves
d.Send the worker to the dining room to bus tables

Workers with vomiting or diarrhea must be excluded from the food establishment entirely, not just reassigned, because these symptoms shed large numbers of pathogens. They may return only after they are symptom-free for the required period (generally 24 hours) and cleared under the reporting rules. Gloves or a different job do not make an ill worker safe.

NYC Health Code Article 81
16. Which symptom or diagnosis requires a food worker to be EXCLUDED and reported, especially in an establishment that serves a high-risk population?
a.A minor headache
b.Dry, itchy skin on the arm
c.A slight cough with no fever
d.Jaundice (yellowing of the skin or eyes) or a diagnosis of a foodborne illness

Jaundice can indicate Hepatitis A and, along with confirmed foodborne illnesses (Salmonella, Shigella, E. coli, Hepatitis A, Norovirus), requires exclusion and reporting to the health department. Vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice, and sore throat with fever are the key reportable conditions. A headache, dry skin, or a cough without fever are not on the exclusion list.

NYC Health Code Article 81
17. A server reports a sore throat accompanied by a fever. In an operation serving the general public, what is the correct action?
a.Restrict the worker from handling food and food-contact surfaces until symptom-free or cleared
b.Ignore it since a sore throat is minor
c.Move the worker to prep raw vegetables
d.Require the worker to wear a face mask and keep serving

A sore throat with fever means the worker must be restricted from working with or around food and clean equipment until they are symptom-free or have a doctor's clearance. In establishments serving high-risk populations, exclusion is required. A mask does not remove the risk of transmitting streptococcal bacteria through food.

NYC Health Code Article 81
18. What is the correct way for a cook to cover an infected cut on their finger before handling food?
a.Leave it open so it can breathe
b.Cover it with a cloth napkin
c.Cover it with a clean bandage and then wear a single-use glove or finger cot over it
d.Just wash their hands more often

An infected or open wound on the hand must be covered with a clean, tight bandage and then covered again with a single-use glove or finger cot to keep pus and bacteria such as Staphylococcus away from food. A cloth napkin is not an approved cover and leaving it open contaminates food. The double barrier also keeps the bandage from falling into food.

NYC Health Code Article 81
19. Why must food workers wear a hat, hairnet, or other effective hair restraint?
a.To keep their hair styled
b.To keep hair and dandruff from falling into food and to stop them from touching their hair
c.Only because customers prefer it
d.To keep their head warm in the cooler

Hair restraints keep loose hair and dandruff out of food and discourage workers from touching their hair, which contaminates hands. Beard guards are used for facial hair. This is a physical-contamination and hygiene control, not a matter of style or comfort.

NYC Health Code Article 81
20. Which of the following is proper work attire and grooming for a food worker?
a.Dangling bracelets and long painted nails
b.A dirty apron worn from the day before
c.Wearing the apron into the restroom
d.A clean uniform, minimal jewelry, short clean nails, and a clean apron removed before leaving the prep area

Good hygiene means a clean outer garment, hair restrained, jewelry limited to a plain band, and fingernails kept short, clean, and unpolished. Aprons must be clean and removed before going to the restroom or taking out trash so they do not spread contamination. Dangling jewelry and long nails can harbor pathogens or fall into food.

NYC Health Code Article 81
21. A cook wears the same pair of single-use gloves to handle raw fish and then to plate a cooked, ready-to-eat dish. What is wrong?
a.Gloves must be changed and hands washed between handling raw and ready-to-eat foods
b.Nothing, because gloves protect the food
c.Gloves never need changing during a shift
d.Only the left glove needed changing

Gloves are not a substitute for handwashing and must be changed between tasks, especially when switching from raw to ready-to-eat food. Wearing the same gloves cross-contaminates the cooked dish with pathogens from the raw fish. The correct step is to remove gloves, wash hands, and put on a fresh pair.

22. When should single-use gloves be changed?
a.Only when they look dirty
b.Once at the beginning of each shift
c.When torn, contaminated, after handling raw food, or after four hours of continuous use, whichever comes first
d.Never, if hands were washed first

Gloves must be changed when they tear or become contaminated, when switching tasks such as raw to ready-to-eat, and at least every four hours during continuous use. Hands are washed before putting on a new pair. Gloves that only 'look' clean can still be torn or contaminated with pathogens.

23. Which foodborne pathogen is most associated with infected workers who fail to wash their hands after using the restroom, and spreads easily through ready-to-eat food?
a.Clostridium botulinum
b.Norovirus
c.Bacillus cereus
d.Listeria in soil

Norovirus is highly contagious and spreads through the fecal-oral route when infected workers touch ready-to-eat food with contaminated hands. Thorough handwashing, no bare-hand contact with ready-to-eat food, and excluding sick workers are the main controls. This is why workers with vomiting or diarrhea must not handle food.

24. A guest with a shellfish allergy orders a pasta dish. The kitchen cooks the pasta in the same water previously used to boil shrimp. What is the risk?
a.No risk, because the shrimp were removed
b.No risk, because boiling destroys allergens
c.Only a physical hazard
d.Allergen cross-contact — shrimp protein remains in the water and can cause a reaction

Boiling does not destroy allergen proteins, so pasta cooked in shrimp water carries shellfish allergen and can trigger a severe reaction. For an allergen order, fresh water, clean pots, and clean utensils must be used. Removing the visible shrimp does not remove the dissolved protein.

25. A worker sneezes into their hand while at the prep table. What must they do before continuing to work?
a.Wash their hands thoroughly with soap for at least 20 seconds
b.Wipe their hand on a towel and keep working
c.Rinse the hand with cold water only
d.Put on gloves without washing

Coughing or sneezing into the hands contaminates them, so the worker must wash with soap and warm water for at least 20 seconds before returning to food tasks. Wiping on a towel or a quick cold rinse does not remove pathogens. Gloves are only put on after proper handwashing.

26. To prevent cross-contamination, a kitchen uses color-coded cutting boards. Which practice is correct?
a.Use one green board for everything to save time
b.Use the red board for cooked chicken
c.Use separate designated boards, for example red for raw meat and green for produce, and wash and sanitize between uses
d.Color does not matter as long as the board is rinsed

Color-coded boards help staff keep raw meats, poultry, seafood, and produce separated to prevent cross-contamination. Even with separate boards, each must be washed, rinsed, and sanitized between different foods. A single board for everything or mixing raw and cooked uses defeats the purpose.

27. A manager finds a worker with long, unrestrained hair leaning over an open pot of soup. What is the immediate concern?
a.The soup will get cold
b.Loose hair can fall in and physically contaminate the food
c.The worker is blocking the aisle
d.The soup needs more salt

Unrestrained hair leaning over open food is a physical contamination risk because strands or dandruff can fall in. The worker must put on a hair restraint and step back from the food. Hair restraints also reduce the urge to touch the hair, which would contaminate the hands.

28. Which is the BEST way to prevent chemical contamination of food from cleaning products?
a.Store chemicals in unlabeled water bottles for convenience
b.Keep chemicals on the prep counter for quick access
c.Mix bleach and ammonia to make a stronger cleaner
d.Store chemicals in labeled original containers, below and away from food, and never mix chemicals

Chemicals must be kept in their labeled original containers and stored below and separate from food, utensils, and food-contact surfaces. Chemicals should never be put in unlabeled bottles, kept on prep counters, or mixed together — mixing bleach and ammonia creates toxic gas. Proper storage and labeling prevent accidental chemical poisoning.

29. A worker labels a menu item as 'nut-free' but it was fried in oil also used for breaded items containing tree nuts. Why is this dangerous?
a.The shared fryer oil transfers allergen protein, so the item is not truly nut-free
b.There is no danger because frying is very hot
c.It is only a problem if the guest can taste the nuts
d.The oil color changes so guests will know

Shared fryer oil carries allergen protein from one food to another, so an item fried in that oil is not nut-free even at high heat. Labeling it nut-free gives an allergic guest false assurance and can cause a severe reaction. Allergen-free items require dedicated, clean equipment and oil.

30. A cook wants to taste a sauce to check the seasoning. What is the sanitary method?
a.Dip a finger in the pot
b.Taste directly from the cooking spoon and return it to the pot
c.Use a clean single-use spoon, taste away from the food, and never double-dip
d.Pour some into the hand and taste it

Tasting must be done with a clean utensil used only once, away from the food, and the utensil must not go back into the food. Dipping a finger, reusing the stirring spoon, or double-dipping contaminates the batch with mouth and hand bacteria. A fresh clean spoon is used for each taste.

NYC Health Code Article 81
31. Where should a food worker store their personal belongings, such as a coat and bag?
a.On the prep table next to the food
b.In a designated area away from food, utensils, and food-contact surfaces
c.Inside the walk-in cooler with the food
d.Hanging over the handwashing sink

Personal items must be kept in a designated area away from food, equipment, and food-contact surfaces so they do not contaminate them. Storing coats or bags on prep tables, in coolers, or over sinks spreads dirt and pathogens. Keeping personal effects separate is a basic hygiene control.

NYC Health Code Article 81
32. A newly hired cook says he had diarrhea this morning but feels well enough to work. What should the supervisor do?
a.Let him cook because he feels fine now
b.Let him work the register
c.Tell him to just wash his hands often
d.Exclude or restrict him per the health rules until he is symptom-free for the required time

Diarrhea is a reportable symptom, and a worker with it must be restricted or excluded until symptom-free for the required period (generally 24 hours). Feeling 'well enough' does not mean the person has stopped shedding pathogens. The supervisor must follow the reporting rules rather than let the worker handle food or money.

NYC Health Code Article 81
33. Thawing raw shrimp drips onto trays of ready-to-eat cheese stored below it in the cooler. This situation is:
a.Cross-contamination that must be corrected by storing raw items below ready-to-eat items
b.Acceptable because both are refrigerated
c.Only a temperature problem
d.Safe because cheese is cooked before serving

Raw seafood juices dripping onto ready-to-eat cheese is cross-contamination, and the fix is to store raw items below and separate from ready-to-eat foods. Refrigeration slows but does not stop pathogen transfer. The cheese is eaten as-is, so any contamination goes straight to the guest.

34. Which practice best protects guests with allergies when a special order is placed?
a.Guessing the ingredients from memory
b.Adding the allergen 'just a little' since small amounts are safe
c.Checking every ingredient and label, using clean sanitized tools, and confirming with the kitchen
d.Serving the regular dish and telling the guest to pick around it

Safe allergen service means verifying all ingredients and labels, using clean and sanitized equipment, and communicating clearly between server and kitchen. Even a small amount of an allergen can cause a life-threatening reaction, so guessing or 'a little' is never acceptable. Picking around an allergen does not remove the protein already in the food.

35. Which statement about hand sanitizer in a food establishment is correct?
a.Hand sanitizer replaces handwashing
b.Hand sanitizer may be used only after proper handwashing, never instead of it
c.Hand sanitizer works better on visibly dirty hands
d.Hand sanitizer removes the need for gloves on ready-to-eat food

Hand sanitizer is a supplement used only after hands are properly washed with soap and water; it does not remove soil or all pathogens on its own. It cannot replace washing, especially on visibly soiled hands. Ready-to-eat food still requires gloves or utensils regardless of sanitizer use.

NYC Health Code Article 81
36. A physical hazard was reported when a customer bit into a bone fragment in a boneless chicken sandwich. How could this best be prevented?
a.Cooking the chicken longer
b.Adding more sauce to hide fragments
c.Freezing the chicken first
d.Inspecting and, when needed, filtering or checking food during preparation to catch foreign objects

Physical hazards like bone or metal fragments are prevented by inspecting incoming and prepared foods and removing foreign objects during preparation. Cooking longer, adding sauce, or freezing does nothing to remove a hard object. Staff should be trained to watch for and report physical contaminants.

37. A cook finishes a cigarette in the alley and comes back to cut vegetables. What must happen first?
a.Wash hands thoroughly before handling food again
b.Nothing, since smoking was done outside
c.Only put on a hat
d.Chew gum to freshen up

Smoking contaminates the hands and mouth, so hands must be washed thoroughly after smoking and before returning to any food task. Smoking is not allowed in prep areas, and even when done outside it requires handwashing before resuming work. A hat or gum does not remove the contamination.

NYC Health Code Article 81
38. Which of these describes a biological hazard?
a.A stone in a bag of dried beans
b.Sanitizer residue left on a plate
c.Salmonella bacteria on raw poultry
d.A staple that fell into a salad

A biological hazard is a living or microbial contaminant such as bacteria, viruses, parasites, or fungi — Salmonella on raw poultry is a classic example. A stone or a staple is a physical hazard, and sanitizer residue is a chemical hazard. Biological hazards cause most foodborne illness and are controlled by temperature, hygiene, and cross-contamination practices.

39. A worker returns from taking out the garbage. Before handling clean plates and food, they should:
a.Just put on gloves
b.Wash their hands thoroughly with soap and water for at least 20 seconds
c.Wipe hands on the apron
d.Rinse hands with cold water only

Taking out garbage contaminates the hands, so a full 20-second soap-and-water wash is required before touching clean plates or food. Putting on gloves over dirty hands, wiping on an apron, or a cold rinse does not remove pathogens. Handwashing is the barrier that protects the food.

NYC Health Code Article 81
40. Why does a food establishment need an accessible handwashing sink stocked with soap and single-use towels in the food-prep area?
a.To wash produce
b.To thaw frozen meat
c.To fill cooking pots
d.So workers can wash their hands frequently and properly, which prevents contamination of food

A dedicated handwashing sink with warm water, soap, and single-use towels must be accessible so workers can wash hands frequently and correctly. It is for handwashing only — not for washing produce, thawing meat, or filling pots, which would contaminate the sink. Easy access to handwashing is essential to preventing foodborne illness.

NYC Health Code Article 81

Cập nhật gần nhất: · quy trình kiểm tra

Đội Ngũ Biên Tập PrepPass · Đối chiếu với NYC Health Code Article 81 · Quy trình kiểm tra

New York City Food Protection Certificate Exam thi những gì?

New York City Food Protection Certificate Exam do New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) tổ chức. Trọng số chủ đề dưới đây lấy từ đề cương thi chính thức — hãy ưu tiên học các chủ đề có trọng số cao nhất.

Số câu hỏi
50 multiple-choice questions; proctored in-person final exam at the Health Academy
Điểm đậu
70%

Phân bố chủ đề

  • 20%
    Time & Temperature (NYC)
  • 18%
    Foodborne Illness
  • 17%
    Contamination & Hygiene
  • 15%
    Pests & Facilities
  • 15%
    HACCP
  • 15%
    NYC Regulations (Article 81)

Kỳ thi này khó cỡ nào?

Độ khó trung bình. Kỳ thi Bảo vệ Thực phẩm NYC có giám sát và đóng sách, ~50 câu, 70% để đậu. Khó hơn thẻ food handler vì kiểm tra khả năng phán đoán của người giám sát theo Bộ luật Y tế NYC (vùng nguy hiểm 41-140°F, không phải số FDA chung).

Số giờ học khuyến nghị
8-15 giờ trong 1-2 tuần, cộng khóa học miễn phí của DOHMH.
Tỷ lệ đậu lần đầu (ước tính)
Đa số đậu trong 1-2 lần. Lỗi tập trung ở nhiệt độ riêng của NYC và quy tắc Điều 81.
Nên ưu tiên học đâu trước
Quy tắc thời gian-nhiệt độ NYC (41-140°F, thịt xay 158°F) và yêu cầu Điều 81.

Câu hỏi thường gặp

How many NYC Food Protection practice questions are here?+

240 original practice questions across all 6 topics — foodborne illness, NYC time-temperature rules, contamination & hygiene, pests & facilities, HACCP, and NYC regulations — in English and Español, with NYC Health Code Article 81 citations.

Is this NYC Food Protection practice test free?+

Yes — completely free, no signup. The official DOHMH course is free too; the proctored final exam at the Health Academy costs $24.60. PrepPass is a free study aid to help you pass it.

Are these real NYC Food Protection exam questions?+

No. All 240 questions are original prose written from the public-domain NYC Health Code Article 81 and DOHMH food-protection concepts. We never copy the real exam.

What temperatures does the NYC exam use?+

NYC uses its own values: the Temperature Danger Zone is 41°F to 140°F, hot holding is 140°F (not the generic FDA 135°F), and ground meat must be cooked to 158°F. Our questions use the NYC numbers.

How do I get the NYC Food Protection Certificate?+

Take the free 15-lesson online course from the NYC Health Academy (English, Spanish, Chinese, and more), then pass the proctored exam ($24.60, 70% to pass). The certificate does not expire, and a certificate-holder must be on site during operating hours.

What languages is the NYC course available in?+

The DOHMH course is offered in English, Spanish, Chinese, and other languages. PrepPass practice is available in English and Español.

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