madmatt wrote:just jump through the hoops and get a permit.

madmatt wrote:just jump through the hoops and get a permit.

madmatt wrote:Just FYI - you DO NOT need a permit to serve drinks, unless they are fresh squeezed juices. If you're just doing a bar, you DON'T need a permit.
Nitevenus wrote:It's a possibility because of it being such a large event that you didn't even know it was happening (the inspection). I have done other public events with food service and have been quietly inspected. I don't believe that they have to inform you they are inspectors. If you were doing it wrong, something would have been said.
Nitevenus wrote:It's a possibility because of it being such a large event that you didn't even know it was happening (the inspection). I have done other public events with food service and have been quietly inspected. I don't believe that they have to inform you they are inspectors. If you were doing it wrong, something would have been said.
marcgorcey wrote:Nitevenus wrote:It's a possibility because of it being such a large event that you didn't even know it was happening (the inspection). I have done other public events with food service and have been quietly inspected. I don't believe that they have to inform you they are inspectors. If you were doing it wrong, something would have been said.
That is possible, however since I was in the kitchen during all meal times, and since non-kitchen personnel are not allowed to be in the cooking area it's hard to see how this could have happened.
My suspicion is that it just couldn't be scheduled. The inspectors seem to work 9 to 5, which happens to be almost outside the time window for meal service in our camp. They might have caught the last 1/2 hour of breakfast or so.
I don't think that we were inspected.
theCryptofishist wrote:marcgorcey wrote:Nitevenus wrote:It's a possibility because of it being such a large event that you didn't even know it was happening (the inspection). I have done other public events with food service and have been quietly inspected. I don't believe that they have to inform you they are inspectors. If you were doing it wrong, something would have been said.
That is possible, however since I was in the kitchen during all meal times, and since non-kitchen personnel are not allowed to be in the cooking area it's hard to see how this could have happened.
My suspicion is that it just couldn't be scheduled. The inspectors seem to work 9 to 5, which happens to be almost outside the time window for meal service in our camp. They might have caught the last 1/2 hour of breakfast or so.
I don't think that we were inspected.
The lack of an inspection report to put on public display tends to support you.

wraith wrote:As a professional cook, I'm amazed at all the bitching that happened earlier in this thread about making people cooking for the public follow elementary sanitary practices.
To give an excellent example of something that happened locally, imagine the fun and exciting participatory experience you could have when J. R. Peabody over there is making kebabs, never having actually been educated to understand that raw chicken carrying salmonella shouldn't be handled at the same time as finished food.
Because I know what I want to do is spend my time in the port-a-johns, dying of heat and trying to crap out what few functioning brain cells I have left. :D
domitron wrote:And believe me with the passive attitudes I see here, so willing to bend over to be fucked a little harder, that day is coming.
I guess this is how any event must become once it gets really big.

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