Food safety hub
Food safety systems that work in real operations
This section is for the part of the job people call common sense until it fails inspection, burns out the crew, or gets ignored on a busy shift.
I built it around the habits and weak spots I keep seeing in kitchens: labeling that slides, handwashing that gets inconsistent, logs nobody trusts, and procedures that were never realistic to begin with.
Core categories
The daily systems that usually need work first
Time and temperature control
Holding, cooling, reheating, labeling, and the daily habits that keep food from drifting out of control.
Sanitation and cleaning flow
Not just whether things get cleaned, but whether the routine makes sense when the kitchen gets busy.
Training and accountability
Make it easier for staff to do the right thing without needing a manager speech every shift.
What I am usually trying to prevent
Small habits that become big deductions
- Weak date marking or TPHC follow-through
- Handwashing that fades as the shift gets chaotic
- Sanitizer buckets or dish setups that are not actually helping
- Illness reporting that only exists as a poster on the wall
- Logs filled out because somebody has to, not because they mean anything
- Training systems nobody can maintain once the rush starts
Useful pages
Start with the topics that solve the most common misses
Texas Food Manager Certification Explained
A plain-English guide for owners who do not want certification to become a last-week fire drill.
Time as Public Health Control
How to use TPHC without turning it into confusing paperwork or a label mess.
3-Compartment Sink Guide
A basic system that still causes a surprising amount of trouble when nobody owns it clearly.
Austin support
If your systems look fine on paper but break under pressure, I can help.
I work with Austin operators who need safer routines, cleaner follow-through, and fewer food safety surprises when the kitchen gets busy.