I love Japanese stuff, but the way they do things and how risk averse they are just annoys me to the nth degreeAnd in Asia I have seen people put on a new pair of gloves each time they go to the buffet to get food. They were Japanese.
I love Japanese stuff, but the way they do things and how risk averse they are just annoys me to the nth degreeAnd in Asia I have seen people put on a new pair of gloves each time they go to the buffet to get food. They were Japanese.
Or not. The QF jimjams were designed by a celebrity! and he thought it would therefore by appropriate in Melbourne's haute couturehe may have been clearly disorientated and distressed and not fully appreciative that Melbourne people are the best-dressed folk in the country
Because they know the top rolls have been handled.Why must they get one from the very bottom and manhandle every other roll in the basket
If people don't handwash prior to, and use the non touch technique to put on gloves, you might as well not put them on. (Think about the technique of putting on sterile gloves with clean but unsterile hands while maintaining the sterility of the gloves)gloves
Clearly a model pax, I don't even recall you on the flight. I did find the couple in 1A and 1E to be entertaining. They were wearing both a surgical mask and an N95 mask when they disembarked. lolI was wedged between 1E and 1K and an absolute model passenger.
If that's the case, the Indian Continent and the Korean Peninsula have a long way to go. My lovely Indian friends eat with their hands, and at the odd Korean dinner I have attended, we all eat from the food on the table - yes, more than double dipping and I have never ended up in the Alfred or Royal North Shore.
Also Pakistan. That's a very important etiquette thing - the left had is used for abolitions and is unclean in those cultures. Hence you gotta eat with your right hand.Indian food is best eaten with right hand. I always eat it that way at home. Out? Maybe.
not to get into a side debate about Covid which is even more triggering to some than tongs, but the whole
I think Noro is airborne too? In the spray.Since the discussion has gotten into the food handling in public buffets, here's something that I recall.
Maybe @drron can confirm, but in the food handling scenario, the highest concern around transmissible illnesses, isn't respiratory things like covid and flu.
But rather the biggest issue in these settings is norovirus and similar if I recall correctly
Grubs in the buffet is why noro has been ripping through cruise ships for decades -
The abolition of ablutions is essential.the left had is used for abolitions...
Thankfully my son who has haemochromatosis doesn't like oysters.Though i was originally training as a respiratory physician. but in the last 16 years of my practice became a real general physician in rural and regional areas. But GI infections are the major problem with improper food handling.Here is a USDA article on foodborn illnesses. People may treat the subject lightly but many die each year from these illnesses.
Personally I identified a major salmonella outbreak from Griffith to Mildura by diagnosing the initial carrier who was a cook at a pub about midway between the two.
My personal involvement is looking out for Vibrio Vulcanificus as it is a bacteria that thrives particularly in high iron situations so those of us with Haemochromatosis are at a higher risk. often comes from eating oysters which I love. I became well aware of all the possible symptoms and have diagnosed several cases. Usually occurs in tropical and subtropical climates but i diagnosed a case that originated in Tasmania. The fellow had the typical skin rash. He was a commercial sea urchin diver. Sea urchins live on oysters. A short search revealed that oysters from St. helens had been found to contain vibrio vulcanificus and he operated out of St. Helens.
Technically, the mode of transmission is called the faecal-oral route...I think Noro is airborne too? In the spray.
Technically, the mode of transmission is called the faecal-oral route...
However that's just me and I realise some would roll their eyes at this and think "clean freak" or something, but again I'm in a special personal medical situation that doesn't apply to most people. So judge away if you like - I like to protect my health in a common sense, but not obsessive way.
user can control
And you dont ever want to get that mixed up...Hence you gotta eat with your right hand.
And you dont ever want to get that mixed up...
I've had a barperson in bali mix my scotch and ice with their finger before serving with a smile..., a waiter in croatia serve my soup bowl with his thumb fully immersed..., and used a loo in a restaurant in Thailand with plates of just cooked fish cakes stacked on the concrete floor adjacent the wash basin...gotta love those local flavours
I don't even recall you on the flight
I did find the couple in 1A and 1E to be entertaining
I was back in row 2
wondering if border force was going to let me keep my wooden gifts from the conference in India.
But some people don't.... and yet you survived!
non touch technique to put on gloves, you might as well not put them on. (Think about the technique of putting on sterile gloves with clean but unsterile hands while maintaining the sterility of the gloves)
he thought it would therefore by appropriate in Melbourne's haute couture
When life gives you melons, make melonadeNow, what is the proper protocol for dealing with melons?
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
All this talk about hands in food takes me back to the mid 60s and our domestic science teacher Miss Anderson. Dark red nail polish always in the same state of chipped-ness. Making pastry with red talons poking about in it and the odd fleck of polish you'd find. Absolutely gross. IIt scarred me for life - I've never made pastry since unless in a food processorI did a few years working in hospitality back when I was a uni student.
Our bistro had a number of bains-marie, which contained a range of stews, pasta dishes and the like. Each of these had a large ladle for self serving a portion onto your plate.
One of the semi regular customers was an older lady who used to come in on occasion.
She would taste test nearly every dish, directly off the serving ladle, and then put the ladle back into the stew or whatever in the bains-marie. If one of us caught her she would feign ignorance and say she didn't speak english.
I had these visions that we would one day find her false teeth in the stew at the end of the night (fortunately this never came to pass!)
Yikes!