Business & Tech

Restaurant Inspections: Chipotle, Panera, Jerry's Subs, Taco Jalisco

The latest health, cleanliness inspections in or near the Greater Alexandria area this week.

Inspectors from the Virginia Department of Health recently visited several restaurants in or near the Greater Alexandria area. See a sampling of those results below, and visit the health department's Web site for a complete list of recent inspections.

Chipotle Mexican Grill #710
6770 Richmond Highway
Date of inspection: June 6
3 critical violations, 3 non-critical violations
Some food was being kept at temperatures above 41 degrees.
 
Panera Bread #862
6670 Richmond Highway
Date of inspection: May 31
0 critical violations, 3 non-critical violations
Wet mops weren't being stored properly; hot water tank was leaking water.
 
Jerry's Subs & Pizza
6308 Richmond Highway
Date of inspection: May 30
0 critical, 3 non-critical violations
Wall and ceiling near ice machine needed cleaning.

Taco Jalisco
8645 Richmond Highway
Date of inspection: May 30
0 critical, 0 non-critical

Here's a little about the health inspection process of area restaurants, from the state Department of Health:

"Ideally, an operation would have no critical violations, or none which are not corrected immediately and not repeated. In our experience, it is unrealistic to expect that a complex, full-service food operation can routinely avoid any violations," according to department of health website.

The site continues: "Keep in mind that any inspection report is a 'snapshot' of the day and time of the inspection. On any given day, a restaurant could have fewer or more violations than noted in the report. An inspection conducted on any given day may not be representative of the overall, long term cleanliness of an establishment."

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Full reports can be accessed on the health department's website.

  • core item "usually relates to general sanitation, operational controls, sanitation standard operating procedures (SSOPs), facilities or structures, equipment design, or general maintenance."
  • priority item is "a provision in this Code whose application contributes directly to the elimination, prevention or reduction to an acceptable level, hazards associated with foodborne illness or injury and there is no other provision that more directly controls the hazard," and "includes items with a quantifiable measure to show control of hazards such as cooking, reheating, cooling, handwashing."
  • priority foundation item "includes an item that requires the purposeful incorporation of specific actions, equipment or procedures by industry management to attain control of risk factors that contribute to foodborne illness or injury such as personnel training, infrastructure or necessary equipment, HACCP plans, documentation or record keeping, and labeling."

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