Stuff You Should Know - How Restaurant Health Inspections Work
Episode Date: November 7, 2017If you've ever worked in a restaurant, you know the feeling that occurs when the health inspector pays a visit. While nerve wracking, it's the best insurance patrons have that their food will be prepa...red and served in a proper environment. Learn all about how these inspections work, from their past history to current incarnation. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, there's Charles, W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry Rowland.
You put the three of us in the room together
with some raw chicken and some old mop water.
You got yourself Stuff You Should Know.
So gross.
So actually, Chuck, before we get started,
we have a very special guest here with us today,
our good friend and colleague, Jack O'Brien.
Yeah, so first of all, say hello, Jack.
Hi guys, thanks for having me.
Sure, as a little means of setup here,
we want to let everyone know how this kind of came about.
We are expanding our podcast network,
which is great and fun and awesome for everyone here.
And one of the super cool things that happened
is our boss or company owner said,
hey, guess what?
We have just got Jack O'Brien away from crack.com
to come over to our network
to kind of launch the comedy wing of our network.
And I think that the people need to hear
about your first efforts here,
a show that I think is great called,
and it's quite a challenge too,
but tell everyone about The Daily Zeitgeist.
Right, so The Daily Zeitgeist is a daily news
pop culture podcast.
Basically, we're trying to get a,
take a sample of what's going on
in the big kind of national cultural unconscious.
So we talk about news, we talk about pop culture.
We discuss things like that.
We've look at tabloids because those are news sources
that more Americans see than just about any others
since everybody needs to buy milk.
So yeah, that's the sort of stuff we look at
as well as the actual news.
And like Jack, you said something that I think probably
passed a few people by, this is daily,
like Monday through Friday,
you guys research and record and release a new podcast,
Monday through Friday, right?
That's what we do.
It's actually been fun and I think we're kind of
hitting our stride, getting into a bit of a rhythm, but.
Totally.
Yeah, it's just a lot of fun to kind of,
I get to read really interesting ideas
and really interesting news articles
and talk about them every day.
So I couldn't ask for a more fun job.
So where can everybody find this, Jack?
Where's the Daily Zeitgeist?
Well, if you know how to spell Zeitgeist,
you can search the Daily Zeitgeist
on just about any podcasting application.
I would recommend Apple Podcasts, just the Daily
and then type in Z and we should pop up.
And you guys send a $5 bill to each new subscriber
for a limited time, right?
That's correct, every single one of them.
Cool.
Yeah, very limited time, very limited time.
We want to wish you an official welcome to the family.
You came to Atlanta, we hung out something
and then we met briefly out in LA at that podcast conference,
but it's just really awesome to have you guys aboard
and I look forward to seeing what else
comes out of the comedy wing.
I appreciate it, guys.
Thanks for coming on, Jack.
Thanks for having me.
Lifelong dream, longtime listener, first time caller.
See you, Jack.
Bye.
All right, man, well, let's get on with the episode.
So, Chuck, have you ever been to a restaurant
and seen something that you weren't supposed to see
and been like, oh, I just ate here?
I used to work at restaurants, as you know,
and some of them were pretty gross.
I worked at a couple myself
and I never saw anything that was like, this is wrong,
but I realized over the years
that I'm in the minority in that sense.
Dude, my first job as a busboy,
that was when I saw some of the most horrific things
in my life, mainly because they had, oh, man.
It was the people that worked there.
Oh, they were dirty folks?
They were dirty folks and they were just,
they were people that didn't care about
their own personal health and hygiene in any way.
It was all gross, gross, gross.
I saw a guy one time, should I even say this?
Yes, please, Dish.
And you're talking about kids working in the kitchen
that are gross, like high school dropouts
and hey, I'm not knocking you if you drop that at high school.
Go get that GED and keep at it.
But these were not those people.
They couldn't even spell GED.
They're like, I didn't get my GED.
Yeah, so these people, they were gross people
and I was 13 and I couldn't speak up.
I didn't know, I'm not gonna go to the owner
of the restaurant at 13, because he didn't care.
But I saw one of these dishwashers go into a walk-in cooler
and he was so mad about the schedule that they put him on.
He took the lid off of a big, you know,
15 gallon pot of Brunswick stew.
Oh no.
And he put his shooed foot and leg into it.
No.
All the way to the bottom and then took it back out.
Bleh, bleh.
And let me tell you, man, those shoes,
I've never had more disgusting clothing in my life
than the clothes that I worked in at a barbecue restaurant.
I know, they're like the whole reason crocs are in business
is because it's the only thing that won't slide
across the greasy dirty floor of every single restaurant
in every single city in the entire world.
Everything about that job was disgusting.
They would drop meat on the ground and say good catch
and laugh and then pick it up off the floor.
It was like, it was like up to in Sinclair's.
The jungle.
The jungle, like right before my little 13 year old eyes,
I grew up on that job in many, many ways.
The only way that it could have been more like the jungle
is if somebody actually died in the Brunswick stew
and they just kept them in there.
It was so foul, dude.
That's grody, man.
I don't even know what our restaurant inspection score was.
I didn't even, I saw nothing like that
at the restaurants I worked at.
I worked at a handful of them, nothing like that.
Yeah, I worked at a bunch more
and that was nothing like that.
This was the cesspool.
So that was the worst of the worst.
Oh my God.
They're all burning in hell now.
Ugh.
That's so gross.
I drove by that place the other day
on the way to Emily's parents.
I went a different route and now it's like a...
Cheechies?
A title max.
Oh, okay.
Which I don't even know what that is.
You can pawn your car title there
for extremely exorbitant interest rates.
Gotcha.
What will the ghosts of Redneck's pass
dwell within those floors?
Wow, man.
Was the barbecue any good?
I guess that's a moot point, right?
I still ate there.
Oh, dude, after the shoe thing?
Yeah, man, I was a kid.
I didn't know.
I mean, I didn't have Brunswick stew that day.
Okay, good.
Or ever again?
I don't know.
I just, I didn't know any better.
I was dumb.
You ate the Brunswick stew, Chuck, didn't you?
I got a lot smarter after that.
Well, again, I've never seen anything in person,
but I've been on the internet and seen things
like that guy who peed in the coffee apparently every day.
But I think that was at an office,
not a restaurant.
There's like this laundry list of fingers
being found in food.
I saw an article, I think, on like NPR or something.
And it was like just basically the top five times
fingers were found in food at restaurants.
And it happens a lot.
Yeah, just quickly, I should say that I feel bad
for restaurant owners sometimes,
especially at places like that,
that it's not like some nice kind of place in town.
You can do all you can do,
but you still can't account for some little jerk employee
that's mad about something
that wants to spit in someone's food on camera.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
You can't just, you can't watch everyone 100% of the time.
And that's usually what is a case like that,
like this dumb dishwasher kid.
He just goes in the walk-ins and says, watch this.
Right, and there's, I saw like there's a case
to be made then for not hiring young people.
Yeah.
You hire people who have like built a background
for themselves, like a career for themselves already.
Those are called good restaurants.
Right.
That's the difference.
Yeah, I guess that is the difference.
So in a sense that it's very much the owner's fault
for being a cheap bastard and hiring people
who put their shooed foot in the Brunswick stew.
Okay, so my point is this, Chuck,
that the shooed foot, fingers in the Arby's,
like all these little things that are just horrible
and horrific and disgusting would be vastly worse
and vastly more frequent.
Were it not for a lone group of people,
the thin blue line between us and utter chaos
when it comes to restaurants, the health inspector.
Yeah, this was, I'm so excited about this episode.
Yeah, oh, it's gonna be a good one, man.
Like, I don't know, when you sent it over,
I was like, all right, but then I started reading
and it was interesting and awesome and-
There's history to it?
Yeah, and one of these consumer advocacy shows
that we love to do, we're doing our little,
a rough-nader impression.
Man, I love that guy.
Great American.
He's the tops.
So restaurant health inspectors are something
of a new-ish invention.
They're certainly not really old,
because at least in the United States,
it wasn't until that book you mentioned,
The Jungle, was published in 1905,
that people really sat up and took notice
and Congress acted almost immediately
past the Pure Food and Drug Act the next year.
That's the impact that Upton Sinclair's The Jungle had.
Yeah, rightfully so.
And in the book, I mean, he went undercover.
He was a muckraking journalist, God bless him.
And he went undercover to basically just take notes
on all the horrible things he saw
in the meatpacking industry in slaughterhouses.
And he chronicled all the inhumane things
that he saw and the way the animals were treated.
But he also saw the inhumane ways the workers were treated.
But his book had this impact and Congress actually acted,
and they created the Pure Food and Drug Act.
And one of the things that came out of that
was what came to be known as the food code.
And the food code is basically like,
here are the things that you should be doing
in your restaurant to prevent from running a foul of the law
or creating foodborne illnesses.
Yeah, and like previous to this,
states were kind of taking care of their own health issues
as best they could on their own.
But then when that book came out,
people were like, wait a minute,
they're shipping meat across state lines.
So the states aren't taking care of it themselves.
This meat's going out everywhere.
So it became a federal thing to be regulated.
They made a federal case out of it.
Well, they did.
And along with the Pure Food and Drug Act,
very importantly, the Federal Meat Inspection Act
was passed in that same year.
And because I think everyone, I mean, even back then,
like if you're grossed out in 1906,
then they weren't as sensitive as we are today.
So there was some gnarly stuff going on.
Dude, a guy falling into like a hot dog grinder?
Come on.
So the food code, the early food code that is,
was sort of kind of the same stuff
that we see today generally.
We have refined everything over the years with science
as to what's truly dangerous and not,
and how it gets dangerous.
But even back then, they were concerned about
like proper meat storage and food storage
and temperatures of things and the hygiene of employees
and the premises themselves.
Yeah, because basically what constitutes good practices
hasn't changed all that much.
But to respond to changes that do come about,
that do change best practices or our understanding
of the science of like foodborne illnesses,
the food code was republished every year,
starting in 1993.
Every two years, they updated it and republished it.
And then in 2001, they moved it to four years.
But that to me is like that, friends,
is the reason we pay taxes.
So that there are people who are going around
finding out the most cutting edge understanding
of how we get sick from foods at restaurants,
then also finding out the exact ways
to prevent this from happening,
publishing it into a book and distributing it to the states
who then put it into practice.
It takes money to do this kind of thing,
but that's why we pay taxes.
The next time somebody tells you that
they don't care about government regulations
and that we live in a nanny state,
you remind them of what it would be like
if they ate out at a restaurant
without this kind of stuff.
Yeah, those people.
We don't need government regulating stuff.
All right, sir, then you will be eating eyeball.
Right.
You'll be eating human eyeball in your next Frankfurter.
I will feed it to you myself.
So the food code today, just like that very first one
back in 1934, is voluntary.
It is not federal law.
It is still up to those states to go out
and write their own rules.
It aligns generally with the federal regulations
and what the FDA recommends.
And then it gets a little more confusing
because when it comes down to actual restaurant inspections,
there is no federal or state inspector that comes in there.
It's the city or the county
who's gonna be carrying this out.
And they work with the state
and then in turn the federal government
to kind of all be on the same page.
Right, yeah, I think it's almost kind of like
the government's the one who has the funding
to go actually look around and survey and find the science
and put these best practices out.
But it's the county or the city
where the rubber meets the road.
That's right.
The shoe meets the pavement more likely, right?
Or the shoe meets the Brunswick stew.
That's so right.
Not the Brunswick stew.
That's like one of the best things I had at Barbecue Plus.
Let's take a break, shall we?
Yeah, I'm gonna go brush my tongue with a toothbrush.
Okay.
And then I'll be right back.
All right.
All right.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slipdresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound, like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it, and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s,
called on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen.
So we'll never, ever have to say, bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
["Stuff You Should Know"]
OK, and we're back in Chuck.
Let me smell your breath.
How's that?
Man, that is nice.
The listerine?
Yeah.
If I do detect us at Tom's toothpaste you used?
No.
OK.
What toothpaste do you use?
I use, I'm using Crest right now.
Which one?
The orange one?
No.
Orange.
That's my favorite.
Yeah, so the color of the packaging is orange,
but the type of mint, it's called citrus mint,
but you would never, if you didn't see that,
you wouldn't be like, oh, this is citrus mint.
It's just its own type of very pleasant mint flavor sensation.
Yeah, I just use the regular, not the white,
but I think it's like the blue Crest right now.
Pro health, I think?
Yeah, yeah, pro health.
And then a dude used the listerine now.
I've been on that for a solid couple of years.
Yeah.
Because it's six in one, six benefits in one.
Why are we talking about this?
I don't know.
Man, we're not even getting paid for that.
Maybe mine is aqua fresh.
It's either aqua fresh or Crest, which everyone makes
citrus mint, that's what I use.
But do you remember AIM?
Oh, yeah.
What was that?
So that stuff, I think it's still around.
It actually doesn't do anything as far as brushing your teeth
goes, as far as toothpaste goes.
But remember, it came out in three different colors,
like green, red, and white, and it was just pretty.
But it's bad toothpaste.
I don't know.
I'm not a big fan of it, but I love looking at it.
How about that?
Yeah, I remember that.
All right, so back to food inspection.
Now that our mouths are clean, there are usually three kinds
of food safety inspections.
You got your reg, the one that's done the reg.
It's known as a routine inspection,
and that's the one where they come in.
Might be every six months.
Might be every year and a half or so,
depending on some stuff we'll get to here in a bit.
And that's the one where you go in
and you just see the thing on the wall that gives it the score.
That's the one where you're working in the restaurant,
and the owner and the manager freak out.
They're like, oh, god, no, no.
They do.
The second they walk through the door.
Although I will say, in New Jersey,
where I worked at the store in Basking Ridge, New Jersey,
we were always great.
They took it really seriously.
Every time the inspector came by, they were like, come on in.
That's the way it should be.
It's a big shout out to the store in Basking Ridge, New Jersey.
Way to go to the store.
That place is great, and they had a restaurant group,
and they had like six restaurants,
and they were all done the right way.
I don't think you could really have a restaurant group
without approaching food inspection and health standards
in that way, too.
Yeah, I mean, it's just dumb not to.
And from what I saw, too, we also kind of,
did you read that mental floss article I sent?
Yeah.
So one of the things, it's called
12 Secrets of Restaurant Health Inspectors.
One of the things they point out is that, usually,
the bigger the chain, so whether it's a restaurant group
on up to a global chain, like, you know, one of those guys.
Sure.
Oh, wow, chinks, buddy.
You're probably going to see something close to 100
every time, and the reason why is because they
have a lot of skin in the game.
They have a lot to lose, right?
If they pointed out with Chipotle,
like there were one or two locations of Chipoles
where some bad cilantro got some people sick with E. coli.
But all Chipotle suffered as a result.
People just stopped going.
They lost hundreds of millions of dollars
and came probably pretty close to going under there
for a little while, and I think they're still definitely
clawing their way out from under it.
So they don't just rely on state, county, or city health
inspectors.
They do their own.
They hire their own third parties to come in and carry out
health inspections much more frequently
than the government's doing.
Just to make sure that they're up to standards.
Yeah, so your local fast food chain
is more likely to be super clean than the mom and pop
in theory.
But in my opinion, you're also more likely going to find
the kid in the kitchen that goes, hey, watch this.
Yeah, yeah, it's definitely a trade-off.
And that's it, yeah, because it's definitely not to say that
mom and pop places are inherently unsafe.
If it's a family business, you have just as much skin
in the game as a global restaurant chain
because this is your family's livelihood.
So yeah, you're going to take it seriously.
So getting back the other two types of inspections real
quick besides the routine are the follow-up investigation
where they do say, all right, you need to fix these things.
I'll be back next Thursday.
Or I'll be back tomorrow, depending on what's going on.
Or I'll shut down your restaurant while you fix this
stuff, it's so bad.
And then there are inspections that are triggered by consumer
complaints.
Yes, that's the one where they use the bat signal.
But instead of a bat, it's like a fork in the sky.
And then the restaurant inspector swoops in and is like,
I'm here, I'm here, everybody, calm down.
Yeah, so I mentioned that restaurants will be inspected
maybe every six months, maybe every year, a year and a half.
It's not willy-nilly.
They are assessed a risk factor as an establishment by the
county or whatever local municipality is carrying this
out.
And that has to do with a bunch of things.
Sometimes it's the kind of food, like if you're serving sushi,
you might get inspected a little more.
Shushi.
Shushi, because you're serving raw fish.
That I didn't say sushi that done.
Shushi that done, did I?
No, no, no.
Oh, no, that's Steve Brule.
Steve Brule.
Shushi sandwich.
I thought it was my missing tooth.
Or if you're cooking meat or whatever, raw meat, you might
get inspected a little more than a deli that just has
pre-prepared meats and foods.
Yeah, those cold cuts are already cooked.
It's not like they're serving you raw turkey slices.
It's already cooked.
They're just putting it together under a sandwich.
That's a low-risk restaurant, comparatively speaking.
Yeah, you know I always get to me, even though I love a Yiro,
is when I see the thing on the spit next to the heat lamp
rotating around.
I always just think, how safe is that?
I would guess if it's operating in the United States,
safe enough.
That's the whole point of restaurant inspectors,
so you don't have to ask that question.
Now you can look at that and say,
somebody who knows what they're doing has inspected that
and determined that is not a threat to my health.
Maybe it just creeps me out to look at it.
No, I'm with you.
I understand.
I also want to say there are some places where you go in
and you're like, this is clearly in violation of some health
codes.
I have no idea how this place is allowed to stay like this,
but it's still worth it.
And I would direct you to Ann's Ghetto Burger.
Oh, yeah.
Right by your house.
Yeah, that's just down the street.
Yes, have you had one?
I've never had an Ann's because I thought that she left
and it closed, but it's still going.
Is she still running it, do you know?
I don't know.
She had been threatening to retire for 20 years or something.
But I knew she wanted to get bawled out and didn't want to
just close it down.
So hopefully she was able to retire.
That's my hope.
All I know is the Wall Street Journal said it was, I think,
maybe the best hamburger in the United States.
The Wall Street Journal ain't lying.
Yes, but if you go there, that's like decades worth of grease
just on the vent around the back splash, like the stainless
steel back splash or whatever, splatter guard behind the griddle.
And you're like, how does she get away with that?
And then you take a bite of it and you're like, oh, because
it matters not at all compared to this burger.
Well, maybe she is compliant because that is the second risk
factor involved with how often you're going to get inspected,
which is if you have a list of complaints or record of
violations on your record, then you're going to be on their
frequent visitor list.
Right.
Yeah, yeah.
And especially if you've ever been the source of a foodborne
illness, you're a high risk automatically.
Yeah, probably permanently.
Yeah, I would think so.
And depending on where you are, you're going to get lots of
visits after that.
That's probably, aside from maybe people getting shot in your
restaurant, a foodborne illness is probably the worst thing
that can happen in your restaurant, I would guess.
And whether you're a new restaurant, well, if you're a
new restaurant in particular, I should say, I think the
standard is that depending on where you fall as far as what
kind of restaurant you are, whether you're a deli serving
cold cuts or a sushi place serving raw seafood, you're
assigned an initial risk assessment.
And then depending on that risk assessment, if you're a
sushi place, say they're going to come visit every three
months for the first year, or if you're a deli, they might
come once every year and a half.
And then depending on how you perform in those inspections,
those regular routine inspections that are basically
predetermined by the type of restaurant you are, that
schedule can either diminish or increase.
So let's say that deli is found to be in violation pretty
frequently every 18 months, they're going to start getting
inspected every 12 months or every six months.
Or that sushi place that's getting inspected every
three months or six months, if it's just painfully obvious
that they are top-notch pros who are taking this quite
seriously and never get caught for anything, then that three
or six months may end up turning into a year.
Who knows?
Yeah, you may have heard reports on the news, too, that
food inspectors have racist policies where they will go
after ethnic restaurants more often.
No, I hadn't heard that, is that right?
Yeah, I've seen reports on stuff like that, that they get
inspected more frequently if you have an ethnic restaurant.
That's pretty rotten.
But there is a food safety expert at North Carolina State
named Ben Chapman that says there's really no data to
back that up.
He said, but there could be biases through consumer
complaint systems.
Oh, I see.
And they did a snapshot from Yelp reviews, which say what
you want about Yelp reviews, they're pretty much the
worst thing ever.
But if you look at Yelp reviews, you do a search for
food poisoning.
And close to 70% of the time, they were ethnic restaurants
where people complained about food poisoning.
I see this food is weird.
It is possible.
I don't recognize it.
That some bias comes in through that.
But that makes sense, then, Chuck.
Like if Yelp is a proxy for the number of times somebody
might call in a complaint, that's one of the ways that
food inspector goes out to inspect a restaurant is when
somebody, the public, calls and says something or
complains.
So that makes uttering complete sense.
Have you ever called and complained about a restaurant?
Have you ever called the health department?
No.
I never have either.
And actually, after researching this article, I was
like, I can think of at least one time when I could have
and should have called, just got undercooked chicken.
And you and me and I both got very sick for the whole
weekend.
And I kept calling this place like, what are you guys
going to do about this?
You have to do something.
And they just got less and less interested the more
frequently I called them by the fourth or fifth time.
I was like, we're still suffering.
I just wanted to let you know.
We're laying around throwing up.
And they didn't do anything about it.
There was no, we're sorry.
I think they actually didn't believe me, maybe.
But now that I've read this, I'm like, I totally should
have called the health department on those guys.
What city was this?
It was in Atlanta.
I think I remember that, actually.
We were sick for an entire weekend.
It was a pretty nice place, too, right?
Yes.
I totally remember that.
Right across from where we used to work in Buckhead,
actually, and they could not have cared less.
And that's what ticked me off.
Oh, you were calling the restaurant over?
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, I thought you called the health inspector over.
No.
But now I'm like, why wouldn't we just call the health
inspector?
Not cool.
Now I would call, for sure, now that I've done this research,
because it's not like, what you're doing
is helping other people from the same fate befalling.
Yeah, you're not being a rat.
Right.
Right, which is another thing that health inspectors
look out for.
All right, well, let's talk about that.
This is how this goes down.
There are unannounced visits, like I said.
So I've worked at, I don't know, like probably four or five
places over the years.
And two of them were pretty bad, the aforementioned barbecue
place and then where I worked in college.
Wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great.
It was a typical college town Mexican joint.
But it wasn't like the super professional other restaurants
that I've worked at.
But at those first two places, I remember when the restaurant
inspector walked through the door, a panic set in.
Invariably, one of the GM or whoever the manager was
would immediately confront, and a nice, not confront,
but greet the person and send, the understanding was,
someone go back to the kitchen and tell everyone
that the inspector is here.
And judging from that mental floss article you sent,
that's exactly how it works.
And for that reason, the very first thing a good health
inspector does is kind of barge through there and say,
I'm going straight to the kitchen right this second.
Right, because they know what's going on.
Right, they have to, or else a whole bunch of violations
get covered up really quickly.
Very quickly.
And so in that mental floss article, basically they said
they needed to do a brisk, like, run walk through the kitchen
as fast as they could.
Isn't that scary?
It is.
But it's also like, you, you skels, like, what do you do?
And like, just stand there and freeze.
That's what they should do is be like, everybody freeze.
And then like, have their finger and thumb in the shape
of a gun, because I don't think they're allowed to actually
carry guns.
Well, there's one health inspector in the mental floss
thing said, we want to see the things that won't be there
in another three to four minutes.
Right.
But that's the thing.
But I mean, it could be anything.
Like, there's, there's like, if you are sitting there
making food, and you have like a cup of Coke, right?
You're not supposed to have that there.
Yeah, and your cell phone in the kitchen.
It's another big one.
I'll bet that is probably the most frequent violation today.
They're covered in poop.
Do you ever see something like, have you ever just stopped
and looked at people on the street, like, with their phones?
Like, they'll just be stopped mid-something.
Like, they have like a shovel, like, propped up against
their, their shoulder, just looking at their phone with
their mouth hanging open.
And it's like, crazy.
We're turning into, like, a society of zombies, man.
How do you stare at your phone?
I've seen you do that.
You do it in a smarter looking way.
I do the thing where I'm, like, stroking my chin
thoughtfully.
Right, your mouth is closed.
Exactly.
I've got, like, one eyebrow arched.
All right, so, the first thing they inspect, obviously,
the kitchen, the manager, the owner, whoever is there on
point, is with the inspector the whole time.
Because they're saying, like, hey, like, little things,
like, that ketchup bottle's disgusting.
Like, why don't you go ahead and have someone clean that up?
I won't dock you a point, but just get it clean.
And the guy wipes it down, he's like, no, that brand, it's
hunt, so, I mean, get some hides in here.
It's disgusting.
But the first thing they inspect are the dynamic areas,
which are the kitchen, food preparation areas, basically
anywhere where there's food actively out is the first place
they'll go.
Right.
That's the static area or dynamic?
That's the dynamic.
OK.
And you start with 100 points, by the way.
I don't know if we mentioned that.
Which I think is kind of optimistic.
It's saying, like, I want to believe the best in you,
rest assured.
So everybody starts with 100, and then we start deducting
from there.
Yeah, then it just gets sad.
So one of the first things they're looking for is employee
hygiene, because remember what you mentioned way back when
the Food and Drug Act was created and the food code was
first established?
There were a lot of basic tenants that were put forth
back then, and one of them was the people who cooked the food
need to be clean as a whistle.
And that's one of the big things that the health
inspector is looking for.
Are they wearing gloves?
Which, by the way, is not to say that if an employee is
wearing gloves that you're totally covered.
The gloves are supposed to be a fail-safe to good hand
washing.
So you want them to be washing their hands very frequently,
and then wearing gloves on top of that.
But then on top of that, not doing things like using
their cell phone with the gloves on, because you've just
automatically contaminated them and totally defeated the
purpose of using gloves at that point.
So there's a lot of hygiene things that are being taken
into account.
But how do you tell whether people are washing their
hands when you're just walking into a kitchen?
Of course, they're going to wash their hands in front of
you in the way that they're supposed to be.
But how do you know they're doing it routinely, Chuck?
Well, yeah, and we should say that there is a way you're
supposed to wash the hands.
You don't rinse them off and just dry them with the towel
that's sitting by the sink.
Or just blow on them.
You rinse, you put on the soap, you scrub for 20 seconds,
then you dry off with a one-use towel.
And good old unsustainable made-out-of-tree paper towel?
Yeah, or if you're a really fancy restaurant, you can just
have cashmere towels laying around as long as you throw them
away afterwards.
Right, you have to throw them away.
But your little trick, I know where you were leading, how
you can tell is this one very crafty restaurant inspector
in the Mental Floss article said, they go in, the first
thing they do, because it takes them a couple hours at a
just sort of a normal-sized restaurant, four or five
hours at a big hotel restaurant.
He said he puts an X on the paper towels.
And if he goes back at the end of his inspection and that X
is still in the paper towel, then he knows hands are not
being washed.
Very sneaky.
Pretty clever.
So I guess we just gave it away, though, so now all the
people are going to go check their paper towel rolls.
I bet there are other ways.
Yeah, that was just a setup to nudge them into the actual
way he's telling.
Yeah, like wash your hands.
Food is another big one, too, right?
You want to make sure that the food is being properly
stored and properly cooked.
And apparently there is a danger zone between, I think,
like zero and 140 that you want to hit or that you want to
stay outside of.
So basically, you want your food, especially raw meat, to
be stored at a temperature frozen, right?
Or else kept at 40 degrees Fahrenheit, 40 degrees Celsius,
or below for fridges.
And then when you cook it, you have to cook it to at least
160 degrees internal temperature for beef, pork, all
those guys, and then 145 for fish.
And if a restaurant's not doing that, that's a big one, as
we'll see.
Yeah, I mean, the best way to think about food storage is
without getting into the specific temperatures is if
it's supposed to be cold or frozen, it should be cold or
frozen.
If it's supposed to be hot, it should be hot.
It's that middle ground is where you're in big trouble.
Exactly.
They talked about lukewarm being the big enemy.
That's never good.
Lukewarm?
I'm trying to think of a time when lukewarm is
preferable with anything.
It just sounds gross.
I like my food really hot, too.
Like that's the one thing I will send something back, is if
it was clearly made a little earlier than the rest of the
party at the table, and it's sort of lukewarm, I might
know I'm in.
I want steam coming off this thing.
Yeah, yeah, that's everything.
So they throw it in the microwave.
Yeah, they do.
And then they're like, oh, I guess you want a little
spit on that, too.
Apparently, soup should be, like the way you reheat
things is a big deal, because obviously that
Brunswick stew, you know, just throw it out every night.
You put it back in the walk-in, so some jerk can step in
it, but when you bring soups and broths back to heat, you
have to re-boil them entirely from their refrigerated
state.
Which makes sense, but that's never very good for food.
If it's already prepared once you re-boil it, that's
probably you're just going to want to throw that away then.
Really?
Yeah, man, it toughens everything up or else it
overcooks it.
It's already been cooked once, so when you bring it to a
boil, you're really cooking it again.
And for foodborne illnesses, that's a good way to treat
it, but it doesn't necessarily make for the most
appetizing food.
All right, I don't know if I agree with that, but that's
all right.
That's what I'm going with.
Frozen meat, you don't just say, hey, Jimmy, throw that
frozen bird out on the table and leave it there until
this evening.
But you don't just leave food out to thaw.
There are proper ways of thawing and bringing things
back to the correct temperature.
Right, and then so let's say you have a place where
you're cutting up that thawed chicken that was
properly thawed, and then you set the knife down and
somebody else picks it up and they start cutting
lettuce with it.
That's cross-contamination.
That is extremely dangerous because, as you know, very
few people cook their lettuce before they eat it in a
salad.
It's raw, and so now it has raw chicken juice on the
lettuce that you're eating raw and uncooked, and you can
die from that.
So cross-contamination is a big one they look for.
It can be a little more simple with something like
silverware.
From what I saw, if the silverware is dirty or smudgy,
that is a big problem because that means usually that the
whole kitchen is dirty.
That's like a big red flag that apparently health
inspectors will tell you that if the silverware is
dirty, it usually is indicative of just a dirty
restaurant in general.
Yeah.
And I've always heard, I don't know if it's an urban
legend or not, but you know just the plastic soda cups
that a lot of restaurants will have?
Have you ever heard that it's not possible for them to get
to the temperature needed to kill any bacteria on them
because they'll melt otherwise?
I have not heard that.
When you drink out of them, they've not really been
sanitized from before.
I have not heard that, but as someone who has worked as a
dishwasher, you don't say, well, I'm going to watch these
things at this temperature.
You just throw everything through there.
Yeah, you don't have any choice in what temperature.
It's all prescribed for you.
You're just basically putting them on the tray and
sliding them through, pulling the door down, and then it
washes them, and you lift the door up and pull them out.
Yes.
And I will say one of my dreams, though, is to have one of
those in my home.
Those, I can't remember what they're called, but they're
wonderful.
It's pretty great.
Yeah.
It just washes everything super fast.
So that's the dynamic areas, right?
Yes.
There's also the static areas, where it's things like, well,
the dishwashing area actually apparently is a static area.
It doesn't change very much.
Where you store cleaning products, that kind of stuff.
I guess you get points deducted if your cleaning
products or your toxic chemicals are not in their
marked original package.
Yeah, that's not good.
Because they can be mistaken for oil and vinegar or
something like that.
Yeah, and they're going to check the static areas
include a lot of things that you don't think would even
fall under the purview of a restaurant inspector.
They're going to look at your HVAC systems, and your vents,
and your smoke detectors.
They're going to look at your dining room, and the floors,
and the ceilings, and your ceiling fans, and your
dumpster behind, and your grease trap.
They look at everything.
Right.
Which is good.
And another one that they take a look at that I think is
probably a big problem for restaurants in a lot of ways
are ice machines.
There's a lot of parts to ice machines that are out of view.
This thing scared me in mental floss now.
That can grow mold pretty easy.
And not just the ice machine, where they're scooping ice
out, which is another thing too.
There better be an ice scoop.
It can grow mold in the ice machine.
But also, those chutes where ice comes out of a beverage
dispenser, those are usually serviced by the company that
makes the beverages that it's dispensing.
And so it would be up to that company to clean those out,
which means that they get even less attention than the rest
of the restaurant.
So the next time you're getting ice out of a beverage
dispenser, get your flashlight out of your pocket, and look
up there, and see if you see any mold.
And then just raise holy hell if you do.
Yeah, and I'm not a big fan of the serve yourself soft drink
stations anyway for out there with the public.
I don't think the public should ever have access to something.
That's why, well, that's not the reason.
But buffets are just so gross and creepy.
I haven't been to a buffet in good Lord, I don't know,
20 years.
But the thought of a buffet, I know they have the sneeze guard.
But people scooping in and serving themselves their own
food from a trough is so weird and gross and archaic that I
can't believe people still do that.
Well, I mean, also, even if you're using a spoon,
like a serving spoon, to scoop something out.
Which you are.
So did the person before you, right?
And that means you're touching the same serving spoon,
and then going back and using your hands to go eat.
So you just touched whatever the other person had on their
hands, and now you're coming in contact with your mouth.
It's a flawed system, for sure.
It is, because what you're saying is, I'm going to count on
the 300 people that have eaten here today before me are all
completely hygienic.
All their hands have been washed.
Yeah, Timothy poop hands is in among them.
No one did a single gross thing.
Like if a tater tot fell off the spoon,
flicked it back in with their finger.
Like no one did anything wrong at all.
No way.
Not even at Whole Foods or someplace.
Those are all gross to me.
Oh yeah, Whole Foods would count with that, too, huh?
Although I do like to build your own salad thing every
once in a while.
That's the exception.
Good salad bar?
Yeah.
It's tough to turn down.
I'm with you.
Well, let's take a break, think a little more about salads,
and we'll be right back.
Hey, dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends,
and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it, and popping it back in,
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice
would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
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If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
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And so will my husband, Michael.
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Yeah, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
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All right, we're back, Charles.
Let's talk about point deductions, eh?
Yes, let's.
Remember, we said that restaurant inspectors are very optimistic
and they start out with 100.
It just goes down from there.
And again, since these are done city by city or county
by county, everybody has their own methods or whatever.
But usually, and I think the FDA has pointed out,
there are five things that you're really looking for,
like five general categories, improper storage of food
as far as temperature goes, inadequately cooked food,
equipment that's contaminated, sources that are unsafe,
that are an unsafe supply of the ingredients, right?
So like, if it turns out like the goat is coming from their
buddy's farm, that might be a problem.
And then personal hygiene of the people who work there, right?
Right.
And so depending on some of those, especially if there's
multiple ones of these, these are big ones.
They will probably be a high priority, type one, or critical
violation, any of those.
Yes.
And then there's also other ones where like, this is not
that big of a deal, but it's definitely something that needs
to be paid attention to.
Those fall after those usually, and it can be anything
from like a dented can that could conceivably contain
botulism, but definitely hasn't been proven to contain
botulism being thrown away to there being a hole in the screen
door that's left open for some reason.
Yeah, and these, as far as deducting individual points
that you'll see on the wall when you walk in, and if you
don't look at that piece of paper when you walk into a
restaurant, I don't know what's going on in your brain,
you should always do that.
Sure.
But like a static violation like, hey, there were some chairs
that had bad legs, your ceiling fan was pretty dusty,
those will be like a point each.
Maybe a couple of points for a minor infraction, like your
cleaning product, like I found a roach, you know, the chef has
his cell phone in the kitchen, that's a couple of points,
all the way up to four and five points, and that's when
you're talking about your fridge is broken, and it is not up
to temperature, and everything in there is at risk.
And that's when they can actually shut you down
until you get it fixed.
Yeah, which, I got the impression from this article
that that is, it's a rarity, that the health inspector
wants to err on the side of the restaurant staying open
and solving everything as quickly as it can while also
it's business not suffering unnecessarily.
So if your restaurant gets shut down temporarily,
like that violation was significant enough that people
were at an immediate risk of getting sick
from visiting your restaurant.
Exactly.
Yeah, it's a big deal in other words, it's as big a deal
as you would think.
Yeah, but with those point deductions, if you go in
and you see like a 72 on a restaurant score sheet,
it's probably not 28 individual small violations.
Right.
There are probably some four and five pointers in there,
and you should probably think about eating there,
or you know, it says in this article, you can go
to the website and really break down, because those
aren't for the public to necessarily be able
to digest easily, but if you do look at them,
if you can get close to them, you can actually look
and see the little category for each thing.
Sometimes it's behind the register, they may not
like you poking around.
Well, the health departments usually put them
on the web these days.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying, like you can investigate
online, but in the restaurant itself, it is marked,
it's you know, a bunch of tiny little letters
and categories, and you can give it a look and you know,
as long, I wouldn't spend too much time there,
like just go by that initial score,
and if you're really like, I gotta see what those 18
points were deducted for, I would just turn around
and walk out.
Right, yeah, especially if there's an identical place
like right across the street.
Yeah, but that is a pretty good point,
because when you think about it, most people just see
that big score prominently displayed,
whether it's like a A or a B or a C,
or like a 85 or a 98 or whatever,
and it's not really meant to be shorthand for the public.
I mean, I guess it is in a way where it's like,
hey buddy, you're really taking a gamble here at like 75,
but when it's really high up, it does seem to be kind
of an indicator, like this one's A-OK in my book,
that's not really what the restaurant inspection report
is supposed to be, it's supposed to be a lot more granular
than that, and so to really tell whether you're running
a risk at eating in a restaurant or not,
you actually do have to go to the trouble of looking up
what the violations were, and then even then,
judging for yourself, because short of the health inspector
deciding to shut the restaurant down
and making the decision for you that you can't go there,
they're not saying like, don't eat here.
Like if it passes inspection enough to stay open,
then as far as the county health department's concerned,
it's good enough for you to be eating there,
but that might not really jibe with your own definition.
So to get that information, you have to go find out
why points were deducted.
Yeah, and you can't, it's either the mental floss
or our own article point out that just because someplace
has a bad rating doesn't mean they haven't fixed things
and it's fine now, and just because it has a great rating
doesn't mean they're not in violation that day.
These inspectors come every six months to a year
for a couple of hours during a lunch shift,
and it is a snapshot of what occurred on that day.
So there is no like failsafe for a consumer,
you just gotta, you know, do the best you can,
cross your fingers.
You had just rolled the dice.
Everything's okay in there.
Or just cook at home and boil everything,
including your lettuce.
Ooh, boiled lettuce, delicious.
What?
I was kidding.
I didn't know if I was missing out on something.
No, no, no.
You got anything else on restaurant inspections?
Just this one more little tidbit for a mental floss
that I thought was pretty great.
Let's hear.
Is that this one restaurant inspector
said that he can smell cockroaches in the air at this point.
Yeah, that's a real problem with cockroaches though,
don't you think?
To be able to smell, I guess it'd be an infestation
is what he's doing.
Yeah, he said you can walk in, take a deep breath,
and he said it's kind of a nutty, oily smell
that you, after years on the job, I can identify it.
He's like, I still get hungry every time I smell it.
I got a lot of roaches in my house right now,
and it's really pissing me off.
And it's a clean house, you know?
It's not gross, it's just, this summer
was just real kind of muggy and dank and.
Do you have a lot of cardboard boxes in your attic
or basement?
No, I don't know where they're coming from.
Like we see them outside all over the place, so.
I don't, maybe it's that swale pond
from the permaculture episode.
Maybe, yeah, the permaculture lady was like,
I forgot to tell you, you're gonna have roaches.
This is the only new thing.
Right, I don't know, man.
Good luck in Godspeed though.
Go find the most sustainable way to treat it.
I'll be interested to hear what you come up with.
Well, so far it's been the flip-flop method.
Oh, poor roaches.
No.
If you wanna know more about cockroaches
or restaurant health inspections or flip-flops,
you can type those words in the search bar
at houseofworks.com, and I said that,
which means it's time for listener mail.
All right, I'm gonna call this a great gross way
to finish this gross-ish podcast.
Excellent.
Hey guys, wanted to regale you the story
of how you two contributed to my fantastic relationship
with my wonderful girlfriend.
Last summer and fall, I was traveling
across the country camping, going to national parks,
and I wound up in Moab, Utah at Canyonlands and Arches,
and met a smart, fun girl at a brewery,
and we made a date to go hiking the next day.
I picked her up and we went on a wonderful little hike
and disaster struck.
Turns out months of cheddar brought worse than beer
wasn't great for my digestive system,
and I felt horrible, and I had an inescapable urge
to take the Browns to the Super Bowl.
Unfortunately, I was miles away from a leaf,
and I ran out of excuses to keep stopping
and standing still for a moment.
Hey, look at that, Arch, again.
Oh, I can't.
So I had to tell her the horrible truth on our first date,
and I was sure it would ruin it.
Eventually, I made my way to a bathroom,
shoved some poor people aside,
and safely made it back to town,
but I was horribly embarrassed,
and sure I had ruined everything.
On the way back to town, she asked
if she could put a podcast on,
and she played me your episode about poop.
No, nice.
How about that?
She's got a good sense of humor.
Great sense of humor.
I've never been as happy to hear two men
describing fecal matter.
At that point, I knew anyone could spend a date
almost pooping in their pants into an excuse
to share their podcast's favorites as a keeper.
We've been together over a year now,
and we love listening to your new episodes
while we hike and camp.
And poop.
And poop, I guess.
They've got, remember, the love seat
that Saturday Night Live commercial,
where it was like the two toilets facing each other,
so you could hold hands while you poop.
Exactly.
Couldn't be happy to find a new favorite thing
to listen to, and a wonderful new girlfriend
at the same time, so I want to thank you guys.
If you ever get back to Denver,
maybe next year, we don't know yet.
I'll be buying tickets as soon as I hear the announcement.
That is from Tom, and he said,
if you do read this in the air,
please give a shout out to Alice.
Nice, Tom and Alice.
Yeah.
Way to go, kids.
Thanks for writing in, Tom.
Nice story.
If you want to get in touch with us like Tom did,
you can tweet to us at S-Y-S-K Podcast.
Join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know.
Send us an email to stuffpodcast.howstuffworks.com,
and as always, join us at our home on the web,
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For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.