44:02:05:17. Potentially hazardous foods. Potentially
hazardous foods requiring cooking must be cooked to heat all parts of the food
to a temperature of at least 135 degrees Fahrenheit. The food must be held at
that temperature until it is served or it must be immediately refrigerated and
held at 41 degrees Fahrenheit or below, with the exception of the following:
(1) Poultry, poultry
stuffings, stuffed meats, and stuffings containing meat must be cooked to heat
all parts of the food to at least 165 degrees Fahrenheit with no interruptions
of the cooking process;
(2) Pork and any food
containing pork must be cooked to heat all parts of the food to at least 145
degrees Fahrenheit;
(3) Roast beef must be
prepared by a cooking procedure that produces a minimum temperature of 130
degrees Fahrenheit in all parts for a minimum of two hours of each roast unless
otherwise ordered by the immediate consumer;
(4) All ground meats must
be cooked to heat all parts of the food to at least 155 degrees Fahrenheit;
(5) Wild game meats must be
cooked to heat all parts of the food to at least 165 degrees Fahrenheit;
(6) Potentially hazardous
foods which are cooked and then refrigerated must be reheated rapidly to 165
degrees Fahrenheit or higher throughout before serving or must be placed in a
hot food storage facility. Steam tables, bains-marie, warmers, and similar
facilities for holding hot foods may not be used for the rapid reheating of
potentially hazardous foods.
Noncorrosive metal stem-type numerically
scaled indicating thermometers accurate to ±3
degrees Fahrenheit must be provided and used to assure the attainment and
maintenance of proper internal cooking, holding, or refrigeration temperatures
of all potentially hazardous foods.
Source:
23 SDR 75, effective November 19, 1996; 34 SDR 321, effective June 30, 2008.
General
Authority: SDCL 34-1-17, 34-18-22.
Law
Implemented: SDCL 34-18-22, 34-18-25.