Florida Violation V19: Proper hot holding

High PrioritySeverity
Food SafetyCategory
0Citations (12 mo)
Codes 01–28Classification

Violation V19 — Proper hot holding — is classified as a high priority violation in Florida's food safety code under the Food Safety category.

Reference: 61C-4.010(4)(a), FDA Food Code 3-501.16

What the Code Says

V19 — Proper hot holding

Food not held at required hot holding temperature

— Florida Administrative Code 61C-4, FDA Food Code

Why This Matters

BACTERIAL MULTIPLICATION: At 120°F, Clostridium perfringens doubles every 10 minutes — reaching illness-causing levels within 1 hour. Hot food held below 135°F enters the temperature danger zone where bacteria multiply exponentially. This violation is responsible for 40% of restaurant outbreaks and causes 1 million US illnesses annually from C. perfringens alone.

CDC Risk Factor Classification: Improper Holding/Time & Temperature - CDC Risk Factor #3

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

Code Requirements

Hold all hot TCS food at 135°F or above. Monitor with calibrated thermometer every 2 hours. If food drops below 135°F: reheat to 165°F if within 2 hours, DISCARD if below 135°F for over 2 hours. Equipment must maintain food at 135°F or above — do NOT rely on equipment without verification. Document hot holding temperatures.

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Florida food safety violation V19?
Food not held at required hot holding temperature This is classified as a high priority violation under the Food Safety category.
Why is violation V19 (Proper hot holding) dangerous?
BACTERIAL MULTIPLICATION: At 120°F, Clostridium perfringens doubles every 10 minutes — reaching illness-causing levels within 1 hour. Hot food held below 135°F enters the temperature danger zone where bacteria multiply exponentially. This violation is responsible for 40% of restaurant outbreaks ...
What CDC risk factor does this violation fall under?
This violation is classified under: Improper Holding/Time & Temperature - CDC Risk Factor #3.

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.