leek wrote:There are some situations, though, where gloves are required, aren't there?
In theory, bare hands are never supposed to come in contact with ready-to-eat food. You can use bear hands while chopping raw ingredients, butchering a hog, etc... but once you're ready to plate that food, you're supposed to use a utensil or glove-covered hands.
In practice though, what Ronnie wrote above is exactly right. Gloves are for show, not for real protection. They give consumers and regulators a visual sense that the establishment cares about safety. You can
see gloves on a cook, but you can't see whether those hands have been recently washed. But the problem is that a glove-covered hand that just scratched an ass is no safer than a bare hand that did the same. And with a bare hand, you're more likely to notice the ass crud and want to wash it off your index finger, whereas while wearing a glove in a busy kitchen, you'll just move on with plating the salmon that's late getting out to Table 5.
...defended from strong temptations to social ambition by a still stronger taste for tripe and onions." Screwtape in
The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis
Fuckerberg on Food