The Food Hygiene Guideline For Bar and Restaurant

 These publications provide free and
up-to-date licensing information for the retail, entertainment and hospitality trades. In this edition, we detail the ways in which food hygiene legislation influences businesses licensed to sell alcohol.

Food hygiene: a guide for bars

Food hygiene is not limited to the kitchen. If you have familiarised yourself with the food hygiene legislation of the commercial kitchen – meat sourcing regulations, food preparation hygiene, washing up and cleaning procedure – why neglect the most visible part of your business? All too often, food hygiene behind the bar is neglected. Reading up on food hygiene legislation for bars and empowering staff through training can extent customer trust, improve your image and prevent the failure of a health inspection.

Food hygiene behind the bar:

We are all aware of the old clichés of dodgy bar snacks and salmonella in the ice bucket. Yet it usually during their most common day-to-day tasks that bar staff breach food hygiene legislation. From a glass of coke with ice and a slice, to a Mojito cocktail with mint and lime, the drinks served behind every kind of bar will inevitably be complemented with some form of foodstuff.


Don’t despair at British and EU food hygiene legalisation. The majority of food handling only involves basic tasks and the appropriate food
hygiene courses reflect this- training for bar staff should be economic, affordable and conducted in a format that is convenient for you.


Food hygiene law:

Regulation (EC) No 852/2004 of The Food Hygiene (England) Regulations 2006 states that the food business operator must make sure that all the food handlers working in the business are supervised and instructed and/or trained in food hygiene matters commensurate with their work activities. A ‘food handler’ is defined as any person who handles or prepares food, whether it is open or packaged, including drinks and ice.
Staff working with food outside of the kitchen will almost certainly be Category A food handlers: staff who handle low-risk or wrapped foods. Category A covers store-men, waiters and waitresses, bar staff, counter staff, serving assistants, cellar-men and food delivery staff.

Before starting work for the first time, a Category A food handler must receive written or verbal instruction in the ‘essentials of food hygiene’, and should receive ‘hygiene awareness instruction’ within four weeks.
Note: Managers and other staff may also need training so that they have enough knowledge of food hygiene to instruct or supervise others.
Who may conduct inspections?

  • The Environmental Health Departments of local authorities: Environmental Health Departments are the main regulatory body, and may conduct inspections. They have the power to take enforcement action based on these inspections.
  • Meat Standards Agency
  • Food Standards Agency


Food hygiene training courses:

With all this in mind, providing food hygiene training for staff is extremely important, but more often than not only needs to cover the fundamental knowledge required for Category A food handlers. For more information about the half day Fundamentals of Food Hygiene (FFH) training course, visit www.personallicence.com
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