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Take away food at markets and shows

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Take away food at markets and shows

I have witnessed a lot of good and bad examples of take away food stalls through my years of exhibiting arts and crafts and as a travel writer.

Reg and I ordered hamburgers from the 1st Strathfieldsaye Scouts Group, and I felt they showed the best of takeaway food service. They had a covered marquee with three enclosed walls with the food being cooked well back away from the customer and the money handling area and out of direct sunshine. The only food exposed to the air was the food being cooked or served, and those handling the money did not touch the food itself. Our takeaway food was presented to us on a plate with several paper towels per person and clean tables and chairs available for us to eat at, under full shade. No cooked food was being stored until it was purchased. The food represented value for money, the beef in the hamburger was high quality, not fatty and there was a generous serving of coleslaw under the burger, a reasonably healthy choice for takeaway. There was an option of sauce.

I usually find eating at community profit, food stalls, for example, the CWA, Scouts, Church groups will give a reasonable quality, safe food handling. Burger, better than the chips, Pluto pups, jam donuts available from many food vans, though I think these mostly appeal to the teenagers, not the grey-nomad who wants value for their money.

Things to watch out for to avoid a bout of gastro after the show is that any food that is not cooked in front of you is kept at temperatures below 5oC or above 60oC up until serving time. Food stalls must protect the food from contamination from flies, dust, dirt, direct sun, human breath or smoke. Food stalls must consist of a roof and three sides enclosed. All stalls to be situated on a readily cleanable surface, e.g., concrete, brick paving, duckboards, tarpaulins or heavy duty plastic. And the floor covering to extend beneath server tables.

The worst ever example of food handling I have seen was a chicken van who cooked the chicken at the back of the van it served from, out in the open and the stench of the thawed defrosted chicken before it’s being cooked was overwhelming. These days I even sniff around the back of a stall before I buy from the front and I only order chicken or fish if I feel I know and trust the food stall operators to be as food safety conscious, as I am myself. I got a nasty bout of food poisoning from a dish of garlic prawns bought at the Royal Melbourne Show. I buy a chicken and mushroom dish from an Asian food stall I know; you can watch it as in is cooked. He puts the chicken frozen solid into the wok, cooks it in front of you, If I am there early when it is prepared, there is little possibility of contamination.

If in doubt, look for the obvious safe food handling techniques and do not buy food being cooked by the same person handling the money or stored outside of a bain-marie once cooked.

If you are at a show in Western Australia, I can recommend, Western Australian lamb, ‘The Lamb Van’ for a great just like home cooked, lamb shank. J Yum!

As for drinks, it is almost a fashion accessory these days to carry your own, bottle of water as you walk around a show and to have backup water containers to refill from, in your car.

We had a dream drive from Hervey Bay to Marlborough, Queensland, Australia today.

Here I am adding to the graffiti mural at the invitation of the Marlborough Hotel tonight. I'm adding my name to the internal walls of this country pub which has become my office for the evening.

Travellers can camp overnight in the hotel carpark for a modest cost.

I travel extensively to draw inspiration for my paintings and writing from life experience.
You will discover my Australian rural-lit novels at www.rural-lit.com