This video is intended to provide food safety best practices for cleaning and sanitizing food contact surfaces for summer meals served by community operations, including in non-congregate settings.
This video is intended to provide alternative meal service and distribution food safety best practices for summer meals served by community operations, including in non-congregate settings.
This is the third video in a series of videos that provides health and hygiene food safety best practices for summer meals served by community operations, including in non-congregate settings.
This video is the second in a series that provides information about navigating food safety regulations for summer meals served by community operations, including in non-congregate settings.
This video is the first in a series that provide food safety best practices for summer meals served by community operations, including in non-congregate settings.
Little is known about the food safety risks associated with the various production methods by which schools prepare and serve food to students. Given this, the Center for Food Safety in Child Nutrition Programs at Kansas State University conducted a study.
Many children across the U.S rely on school meals for nutrition. In 2022, the USDA’s National School Lunch Program served 4.9 billion children. School meals should keep kids healthy and help them reach their full potential by providing the nutrition they need.
Each Action Sheet addresses a specific area of food safety by providing you with background information, action steps that will help you build your framework, and resources for the in-depth information you will need to develop or strengthen that area.
Produce Safety University is a one-week training course designed to help school foodservice staff identify and manage food safety risks associated with fresh produce.
The Food Safety team develops education, instruction and technical assistance resources for individuals working in federally funded nutrition assistance programs such as the NSLP, SBP, CACFP, and SFSP.