第 5 章,共 8 章~15% 占考试比重

Preparation and Cooking

The prep line and the stove are where temperature control is won or lost. Correct thawing, hitting minimum internal cooking temperatures, and cooling leftovers fast are the core skills. This chapter gives you the exact numbers to teach and verify.

Safe Thawing

Frozen food must be thawed in a way that keeps it out of the danger zone. There are only four approved methods. First, thaw in the refrigerator at 41°F or lower — the safest but slowest, requiring planning a day ahead. Second, thaw submerged under running potable water at 70°F or lower, with the water flowing fast enough to wash food particles into the overflow, for no more than two hours. Third, thaw in a microwave, but only if the food will be cooked immediately afterward. Fourth, thaw as part of the cooking process, such as dropping a frozen patty straight onto the grill. Never thaw food at room temperature on the counter, because the outside sits in the danger zone for hours while the center is still frozen. Always plan thawing so food never lingers between 41°F and 135°F.

Thaw in the cooler at 41°F or lower
Refrigerator thawing is safest; plan a day ahead since it is slow.
FDA Food Code §3-501.13
Thaw under running water at 70°F or lower
Keep the water flowing and finish within two hours so food does not warm into the danger zone.
FDA Food Code §3-501.13
Microwave thawing requires cooking immediately after
Only thaw in the microwave if you will cook the food right away.
Never thaw at room temperature
Counter thawing lets the surface sit in the danger zone for hours and is not permitted.

Minimum Internal Cooking Temperatures

Cooking to the correct internal temperature is what destroys pathogens, and different foods need different temperatures held for a specific time. Poultry, stuffing, stuffed meats, and any dish combining raw and cooked TCS ingredients must reach 165°F for one second. Ground meat such as hamburger, sausage, and ground pork, plus injected meats and ground seafood, must reach 155°F for 17 seconds. Seafood, steaks and chops of pork, beef, veal, and lamb, and shell eggs cooked for immediate service must reach 145°F for 15 seconds. Roasts of pork and beef must reach 145°F held for four minutes. Commercially processed ready-to-eat food that is only being reheated for hot holding needs 135°F. Always check the temperature in the thickest part with a calibrated thermometer, and check more than one spot on large items.

Poultry and stuffed foods: 165°F for 1 second
This includes whole and ground poultry, stuffing, stuffed meats, and dishes mixing raw and cooked TCS foods.
FDA Food Code §3-401.11
Ground meat and injected meat: 155°F for 17 seconds
Grinding spreads pathogens throughout, so hamburger, sausage, and ground seafood need this temperature.
FDA Food Code §3-401.11
Seafood, whole cuts, and shell eggs: 145°F for 15 seconds
Steaks, chops, fish, and eggs for immediate service reach 145°F.
FDA Food Code §3-401.11
Roasts: 145°F held for 4 minutes
Whole roasts of pork and beef require a longer hold time at 145°F.
FDA Food Code §3-401.11

Cooling Cooked Food

Cooling is one of the riskiest steps because hot food passes slowly through the danger zone, giving surviving spores a chance to grow. The Food Code requires a two-stage cool: hot TCS food must drop from 135°F to 70°F within the first two hours, then from 70°F to 41°F or lower within the next four hours, for a total of six hours. If the food does not reach 70°F within the first two hours, you must reheat it and start over or discard it. Speed up cooling by dividing food into smaller or shallow portions, using an ice-water bath, adding ice as an ingredient, stirring with an ice paddle, and placing loosely covered pans in a blast chiller or the coldest part of the walk-in. Never cool large covered pots on the counter — they hold heat for hours.

Cool 135°F to 70°F within 2 hours
The first stage must be fast; if it fails, reheat and restart or discard the food.
FDA Food Code §3-501.14
Cool 70°F to 41°F within the next 4 hours
The total cooling time may not exceed six hours from 135°F to 41°F.
FDA Food Code §3-501.14
Use shallow pans and ice baths to cool faster
Smaller portions, ice-water baths, ice paddles, and blast chillers all speed cooling.

Reheating for Hot Holding

When you reheat TCS food that will be hot-held, you must reheat it quickly and to a high enough temperature to kill any pathogens that grew during storage. Food reheated for hot holding must reach an internal temperature of 165°F for at least 15 seconds within two hours. The two-hour limit matters: reheating slowly in a steam table or holding unit lets food dwell in the danger zone, so use a stove, oven, or microwave to bring it up fast, then transfer to holding equipment. Commercially processed and packaged ready-to-eat food, like canned soup or pre-cooked items, only needs to reach 135°F when reheated for hot holding. Food that is reheated for immediate service to a customer can be served at any temperature, since it was already safely cooked.

Reheat to 165°F for 15 seconds within 2 hours
TCS food reheated for hot holding must hit 165°F quickly to kill pathogens that grew in storage.
FDA Food Code §3-403.11
Commercially processed food reheats to 135°F
Ready-to-eat packaged items only need 135°F when reheated for hot holding.
Reheat on the stove or oven, not the steam table
Holding equipment reheats too slowly and leaves food in the danger zone.
测试你的知识
练习 Preparation and Cooking 的相关题目
立即练习 →

Last updated: July 2026

反馈