第 8 章,共 8 章~10% 占考试比重

Facilities, Cleaning, Sanitizing, and Pest Control

A clean, well-built facility with safe water and no pests is the foundation everything else rests on. This chapter covers the difference between cleaning and sanitizing, the three-compartment sink and dish machines, protecting the water supply, and integrated pest management.

Cleaning vs. Sanitizing and the Three-Compartment Sink

Cleaning removes food and dirt from a surface; sanitizing reduces pathogens on that surface to safe levels. You must clean before you sanitize, because sanitizer cannot work through a layer of grease. Any surface that touches food must be cleaned and sanitized after each use, when you switch between raw and ready-to-eat food, any time a task is interrupted, and at least every four hours during continuous use. The classic manual method is the three-compartment sink used in order: wash in the first sink with detergent at 110°F or higher, rinse in the second sink with clean water, and sanitize in the third sink with a chemical solution or hot water at 171°F or higher. Then let items air dry — never towel dry, which recontaminates them. Rinse and scrape dishes before washing and change the water when it gets dirty.

Clean first, then sanitize
Sanitizer cannot reduce pathogens through food debris, so surfaces must be clean first.
FDA Food Code §4-702.11
Clean and sanitize food-contact surfaces every 4 hours
Also do it after each use, when switching foods, and after any interruption.
FDA Food Code §4-602.11
Three-compartment sink: wash, rinse, sanitize, air dry
Wash at 110°F or higher, rinse, sanitize, then air dry — never towel dry.
FDA Food Code §4-301.12

Sanitizer Concentrations

Chemical sanitizers only work within a specific concentration, water temperature, and contact-time window, so managers must test them with the correct test strips. For chlorine (bleach) sanitizer, use a concentration of 50 to 100 ppm with a contact time of at least 7 seconds; the water should be around 55°F to 100°F depending on pH. For iodine, use 12.5 to 25 ppm with at least 30 seconds of contact time. For quaternary ammonium (quats), follow the manufacturer's directions, typically around 200 ppm with at least 30 seconds of contact. Too little sanitizer will not kill pathogens; too much can be toxic and leave residue. Water temperature and pH affect chlorine's strength, so always verify with a test kit rather than eyeballing it. Store sanitizer buckets away from food and change the solution when it becomes dirty or drops below concentration.

Chlorine sanitizer: 50-100 ppm, 7 second contact
Test with chlorine strips; too weak fails to sanitize and too strong is toxic.
FDA Food Code §4-501.114
Iodine: 12.5-25 ppm; quats: about 200 ppm
Iodine needs at least 30 seconds of contact; follow the maker's directions for quats.
FDA Food Code §4-501.114
Always test concentration with the right strips
Water temperature and pH change effectiveness, so verify with a test kit, not by eye.

Dish Machines and Backflow Prevention

High-temperature dish machines sanitize with heat, and the final sanitizing rinse must reach at least 180°F (160°F on the dish surface); a built-in temperature gauge and irreversible-registering thermometer verify it. Chemical dish machines sanitize with a solution, usually chlorine, at lower water temperatures per the manufacturer's specs. Either way, the machine must be clean, correctly loaded, and checked each shift. Protecting the water supply is equally critical. Backflow is the reverse flow of contaminated water into the potable supply, often caused by back-siphonage when pressure drops. The best prevention is an air gap — a physical space at least twice the diameter of the supply pipe between the faucet and the flood rim of a sink. A hose left submerged in a mop bucket is a classic cross-connection hazard, so never leave one hanging in dirty water.

High-temp dish machine final rinse: at least 180°F
The rinse must reach 180°F (160°F at the dish surface); verify with the machine's gauge.
FDA Food Code §4-501.112
An air gap is the best backflow prevention
Provide a physical gap at least twice the supply pipe diameter between the faucet and the flood rim.
FDA Food Code §5-202.13
Never submerge a hose in dirty water
A hose left in a mop bucket creates a cross-connection that can back-siphon contaminants into clean water.

Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

Pests like rodents, cockroaches, and flies spread pathogens and contaminate food, so an integrated pest management program keeps them out through prevention, not just poison. IPM rests on three ideas: deny pests entry, deny them food and shelter, and work with a licensed pest control operator (PCO). Deny entry by sealing cracks, installing door sweeps and screens, keeping doors closed, and inspecting deliveries for signs of pests. Deny food and shelter by storing food and trash in tightly covered containers off the floor, cleaning up spills quickly, and removing clutter where pests hide. Learn the warning signs: droppings, gnaw marks, grease tracks, egg cases, and a stale smell. If pesticides are needed, only a licensed PCO should apply them, food must be protected or removed first, and chemicals stored away from food. Keep the PCO's documentation on file.

Deny pests entry, food, and shelter
Seal openings, keep doors closed, store food and trash covered and off the floor, and remove clutter.
FDA Food Code §6-501.111
Work with a licensed pest control operator
Only a licensed PCO should apply pesticides, and food must be protected or removed first.
FDA Food Code §7-202.12
Know the signs of an infestation
Droppings, gnaw marks, grease tracks, egg cases, and stale odors signal pests are present.
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Last updated: July 2026

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