The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, 866-366-3723, uses a risk-based inspection reporting process for restaurants and other food handlers.
Coffee and Cream, 101 N. Front St., Columbia, April 2. Raw shell eggs stored above fruit and ham in the small cooling unit. Old food splatter on the underside of the milkshake mixer. Prepackaged chocolate espresso beans are not labeled properly with the ingredient statement and distributed by statement. Food facility does not have available sanitizer test strips or test kit to determine appropriate sanitizer concentration of the quaternary ammonia. The food facility does not have the original certificate for the certified food employee posted in public view. A working container of hand sanitizer and griddle cleaner were stored on the same shelf with food and single-service articles near the cooking area. Single-service, single-use articles (lids) stored beneath the plumbing of the hand-wash sink, a prohibited area. Food facility is using q
New billboard in Lancaster encourages teens to Put Alcohol on the Sidelines and avoid underage drinking
fox43.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fox43.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Rodent activity, raw sewage on floor: Lancaster County restaurant inspections
Updated Apr 03, 7:01 AM;
Posted Apr 03, 7:01 AM
Shutterstock illustration.
The following Lancaster County restaurants were found to have violated Pennsylvania’s health and safety regulations during inspections between March 7-13.
Inspections are overseen by the Department of Agriculture. The department notes that in many cases violations are corrected by the restaurant before inspectors leave.
MCDONALD’S RESTAURANT
Date: March 13, 2021
Violations: Non-food contact surfaces within the dry storage area affected by smoke, fire, and dry-chemical fire suppression material. All areas affected are to be properly cleaned and sanitized with proper disposal of affected materials that are non-salvageable.
With the closing of its cookie bake shop at Lancaster Marketplace, Taylor Chip has now opened two new locations.
Last week, Taylor Chip opened a small retail shop at bakery in Manheim Township at 1573 Manheim Pike and a production facility in Intercourse at 23 Center St.
Along Manheim Pike, Taylor Chip takes a 1,400-square-foot spot that is the former home of Cinnaholic, which is moving to a new spot at 1831 Oregon Pike, the former home of Plum Street Gourmet.
In Intercourse, Taylor Chip takes over the former home of Foxâs Pizza Den. Taylor Chip will use most of the former pizza shop for production, although there will eventually be a small retail area as well as customer seating on a deck.
Seven restaurants opened up shop, one closed permanently, and four announced their future plans in the county.
Here are the restaurant changes in Lancaster County from March.
Here are the restaurants that opened in Lancaster County in March
Jersey Mikeâs Subsopened a restaurant at 807 E. Main St., Ephrata in the new Ephrata Crossing shopping center.
Wacker Brewing Co.opened its Willow Street taproom in March. Located at 312 Beaver Valley Pike, the new taproom will have inside seating capacity for around 100 and space for around 60 more outside. It will have a burger-focused food menu while also offering 12 beers on tap, cocktails, PA wines and adult slushies.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.