Imagine you’re seated at a table that’s just been wiped down. You watch the waiter walk away with the bucket and rag in hand. Off to a great start – clean table, happy customer. But is it really safe to eat?
While a clean surface might look good, it could still be full of harmful bacteria and pathogens. The crumbs are gone, but if the process stops at cleaning, your customers could still be at risk.
Understanding how to properly use a food safe sanitizer is crucial for keeping restaurants safe and customer satisfaction high.
Let’s break down what cleaning really means, where many restaurants go wrong, and what the correct way to do cleaning and sanitizing actually looks like.
Cleaning, sanitizing, and disinfecting are often incorrectly interchanged, but they each have their own distinct meaning.
If you’re operating a commercial kitchen, simply cleaning tables or prep areas isn’t enough. A properly applied food-contact surface sanitizer is required to reduce pathogen risk and maintain compliance.
For decades, many restaurants have relied on the traditional red bucket system: reusable towels stored in a diluted restaurant sanitizer solution and used throughout the shift.
While common, this method introduces several food safety and operational risks.
Restaurant sanitizer solutions must be mixed at exact concentrations (PPM).
Too weak? Ineffective.
Too strong? Potentially unsafe and non-compliant.
Maintaining correct concentration requires constant monitoring with test strips and frequent bucket changes, something that can easily slip during busy service.
Reusable wiping cloths are often used across multiple tables and prep surfaces.
According to the PURELL® Brand1, research shows that reusable cloths can harbor bacteria and contribute to cross-contamination if not properly managed. In some testing scenarios, wiping down a surface with a contaminated cloths actually increased bacterial counts on surfaces.
If the towel is compromised, every surface it touches may be compromised.
To do it right, the red bucket system requires:
In today’s labor environment, added complexity increases the likelihood of shortcuts and risk. Still, if you're using the red bucket method and all this isn't being regularly and properly performed, there's a real chance your team is doing more harm than good as they wipe down tables.
This is a question we hear at BradyPLUS a lot.
Here is our recommendation for cleaning and sanitizing food-contact surfaces in a commercial kitchen:
To reduce dilution errors and cross-contamination risks, many operators are transitioning to ready-to-use surface disinfection systems.
Food-contact surface sanitizing wipes eliminate:
They standardize compliance and simplify restaurant sanitizing procedures.
Solutions like PURELL® Foodservice Surface Sanitizer wipes are formulated for food-contact surfaces, require no rinse, helping reduce cross-contamination risks and maintain operational efficiency.
Beyond safety, visible sanitizing also impacts guest perception.
When guests see modern, ready-to-use surface disinfection systems in place, it reinforces confidence in your cleanliness standards.
Food safety is everyone’s business.
A solid food safety plan will help ensure your restaurant is:
A food-contact surface sanitizer is only effective when paired with the correct process, and a system designed to reduce human error.
Sources:
1. PURELL® Brand Surface Solutions eBook: Going Beyond Surface Deep on a Key Well-Being Topic