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Create good habits: How to build a safer food culture

The pass of a busy kitchen in service, under heat lamps, full of dishes ready to be served

In this article

In this article

Food safety culture – it’s the current buzz term creeping into every conversation about hygiene and compliance. It's a crucial part of your EHO inspection, as the Confidence in Management section scrutinises how effectively leaders drive safety practices through their teams.

But without positive action, food safety culture is just a phrase - all mouth and no trousers. It sounds great in a boardroom but adds no real value in a busy kitchen. To move beyond enthusiasm, we must embed micro-habits into the daily routine.

If you’ve risk-assessed, built your HACCP plan, and briefed the team, but find that standards still slip during a busy Friday night, these habit-forming strategies are your missing jigsaw pieces.

1. Consistency is Key

Science tells us habits can take anywhere from two to five months to truly lock in. The goal is to shorten that window through relentless repetition. Think back to learning to drive: at first, every gear change was a conscious effort. Now, you do it without thinking.

  • The Extra Detail: what food safety tasks need to be repeated over and over again in your kitchen? Invest some time reinforcing these actions with your team, again and again, until they become second nature.
  • The Goal: Train the action until it’s a subconscious reflex. When your team are washing their hands, or sanitising their worksurfaces without even thinking about it, that's a big win.

2. Stack Habits

'Habit stacking' is a psychological method where you pair a new, desired behaviour with an existing, unstoppable one. In a kitchen, certain tasks are inevitable; these are your anchors.

  • The Extra Detail: Create specific "If/Then" tasks for your team.
    • If I finish a delivery, then I immediately break down the cardboard and wash my hands before touching the line.”
    • If I start to prepare a dish, then I reach for the ingredients listing and check that I'm preparing exactly according to the specified recipe ”
  • Why it works: It removes the need for 'willpower' or "memory." The first task becomes the physical cue for the second.

3. Design Your Environment

Human beings are inherently lazy - we take the path of least resistance. If the blue roll and sanitiser are at the other end of the kitchen, surfaces won't get wiped as often.

  • The Extra Detail: Consider - what safety tasks are awkward to perform in your kitchen? For instance: stand in your prep area and see how many steps it takes to reach a sanitiser spray and cleaning cloths. If it’s more than five steps, you have a design flaw.
  • The Fix: Make safety tasks straightforward to perform, and ensure the tools required are accessible and obvious. For example - store cleaning materials close to prep areas (but safely to avoid chemical contamination).

4. Explain why

As every parent knows, we can be resistant to instructions unless we understand why we are being given them. A toddler is more likely to put his wellies on if he understands that his feet will get wet and cold without them. In the same way, understanding the consequences of cross contamination, the importance of temperature control or the detail of your allergen policy are absolutely key to a member of your team carrying out safety tasks properly.

  • The Extra Detail: Train and supervise your team with patience. If they are new to role or to the industry (or even if they are not!), they may be missing the crucial knowledge and understanding that underpins food safety.

5. Reward the Good Stuff

We all love a reward. Whether it’s a 'thank you', an 'employee of the month' mention or a bonus, positive reinforcement activates the brain’s reward system.

  • The Extra Detail: Don't just reward the 'big' things, look out for small, everyday examples of great practice. When you see a junior chef stop to re-sanitise after a sneeze without being told, for example, highlight it immediately.
  • The Science: Noticing and rewarding good practice works, as it activates the brain’s reward system and releases dopamine. Dopamine drives learning, habit formation, and goal-directed actions by reinforcing behaviours that lead to pleasure.

Can you create a structured and consistent way of rewarding your team for good safety practice? Your reward will be a motivated and competent team who operating safely.

The Bottom Line

Good safety culture isn’t about mindlessly ticking boxes or saying the right words - it’s about building embedded behaviours that survive the heat and pressure of a dinner rush. Behaviours that happen without failure, even when the manager isn't looking. Get it right, and you can feel confident that an EHO will walk onto your premises and see every member of your team operating safely.

For your team, knowing the 'hows' and 'whys' of food safety is fundamental - that understanding underpins all good habits. Our safety training is built by food professionals, for food professionals. Check out our Food Hygiene, HACCP, and How to Get a 5 Rating courses to give your team the foundation they need.

About the author

Clare Grantham

Clare is one of our course and content writers, with a wealth of experience in both food safety and education. Early career experience in catering and hospitality (chiefly fish and chip shops!) led Clare to undertake various roles, supporting voluntary organisations to achieve safe processes and 5 star ratings within their catering operations. Alongside a postgraduate qualification in education, and a university staff development role, this experience has enabled Clare to develop quality learning materials and resources that address topics from the food handler and business owner’s perspective.

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