Florida Violation V16: Proper cooking temps
Violation V16 — Proper cooking temps — is classified as a high priority violation in Florida's food safety code under the Food Safety category.
Reference: 61C-4.010(4), FDA Food Code 3-401
What the Code Says
V16 — Proper cooking temps
Food not cooked to required minimum temperature
— Florida Administrative Code 61C-4, FDA Food Code
Why This Matters
PATHOGEN SURVIVAL: Undercooking is a leading cause of foodborne illness. Salmonella in poultry survives below 165°F — causes 1.35 million US infections annually. E. coli O157:H7 in ground beef survives below 155°F — causes bloody diarrhea and kidney failure. Trichinella in pork survives below 145°F. Proper cooking is the critical kill step that destroys these pathogens.
CDC Risk Factor Classification: Inadequate Cooking - CDC Risk Factor #2
The CDC identifies five major contributing factors to foodborne illness outbreaks: food from unsafe sources, inadequate cooking, improper holding temperatures, contaminated equipment, and poor personal hygiene. Source: CDC Contributing Factors
Real-World Impact
In 2017, the FDA investigated a Salmonella outbreak linked to undercooked chicken at a restaurant chain. Testing revealed internal temperatures of only 145 degrees F instead of the required 165 degrees F for poultry. The outbreak sickened 358 people across 42 states with 133 hospitalizations.
Source: CDC — Salmonella Reading Outbreak from Undercooked Turkey, 2018
Code Requirements
Cook to minimum internal temperatures: Poultry/stuffing/reheated foods: 165°F for 15 seconds. Ground meats: 155°F for 15 seconds. Pork/beef/fish/eggs (immediate service): 145°F for 15 seconds. Whole roasts: 145°F for 4 minutes. Verify with calibrated probe thermometer in thickest part. Microwave cooking: 165°F, rotate, stand 2 minutes.
References
- Florida DBPR Division of Hotels & Restaurants
- FDA Food Code (Current Edition)
- CDC Food Safety
- CDC: Contributing Factors to Foodborne Illness Outbreaks
- Florida Administrative Code Chapter 61C-4
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is Florida food safety violation V16?
- Food not cooked to required minimum temperature This is classified as a high priority violation under the Food Safety category.
- Why is violation V16 (Proper cooking temps) dangerous?
- PATHOGEN SURVIVAL: Undercooking is a leading cause of foodborne illness. Salmonella in poultry survives below 165°F — causes 1.35 million US infections annually. E. coli O157:H7 in ground beef survives below 155°F — causes bloody diarrhea and kidney failure. Trichinella in pork survives below ...
- What CDC risk factor does this violation fall under?
- This violation is classified under: Inadequate Cooking - CDC Risk Factor #2.
Data source: Florida DBPR public inspection records. Health risk information sourced from CDC, FDA Food Code, and peer-reviewed research. How we collect and verify this data.