Food & Drink

Expired egg salad, moldy peppers: Latest Charlotte-area restaurant inspections

A NoDa restaurant received a “B” grade from the Mecklenburg County Health Department for numerous health violations, including expired food and damaged dishes.

The Goodyear House (3032 N. Davidson St. in Charlotte) received an 87.5% score during an inspection on Friday, Jan. 9.

Violations the restaurant was cited for include:

  • Raw flounder stored above ready-to-eat ham
  • Romesco, garlic and oil, chimichurri, egg salad and cream held longer than seven days or marked with the incorrect date
  • Multiple containers of open liquid eggs with no date markings
  • Three spray bottles of different chemical cleaners with no label throughout the kitchen
  • Chipped and burnt spatulas stored in clean dish area

This is the restaurant’s first “B” grade.

Mecklenburg County sanitation scores

The Mecklenburg County sanitation grades database shows that at least 151 restaurant inspections were completed Jan. 9-15.

▪ Most restaurants received an A grade, or a score of at least 90%.

▪ Two restaurants received B grades, or scores of at least 80% but lower than 90%.

Subham Eatery (8630 Camfield St. in Charlotte) received a score of 85.5% during an inspection on Friday, Jan. 9.

  • The restaurant was in violation of 14 standards, including moldy stuffed peppers in a reach-in cooler and food prep staff wearing several bracelets.
  • Most violations were corrected during the inspection.
  • The restaurant previously scored 93.5% in September

How to search NC restaurant inspection scores

Sanitation scores and their corresponding letter grades are used in North Carolina to assess restaurants’ adherence to rules and standards intended to mitigate and prevent the spread of food-borne illnesses.

You’ve likely seen sanitation grade cards at restaurants you’ve visited, and The News & Observer previously explained what those scores mean and how they’re calculated. According to state law, permits are immediately revoked if a restaurant receives a score of less than 70%.

You can search all restaurant inspections in Mecklenburg County at public.cdpehs.com.

Most common restaurant violations

The Charlotte Observer previously spoke to Adam Dietrich, a local food safety expert, about five of the most common food safety violations restaurants get dinged for during health inspections:

  • Handwashing lapses are common: Inspectors frequently cite workers for skipping required handwashing or recontaminating hands, a major risk for spreading illnesses like norovirus, Salmonella and E. coli.
  • “Performative” glove use causes problems: Gloves are often misused, either by not changing them between tasks or worn instead of washing hands, which can spread bacteria just as easily as bare hands.
  • 41°F is the cold-holding cutoff: The North Carolina Food Code requires cold foods to be held at 41 degrees or below, since bacteria multiply rapidly above that threshold and can reach dangerous levels within hours.
  • Improper storage leads to cross-contamination: Limited space and poor organization can result in raw food juices dripping onto other foods, a known cause of outbreaks, prompting strict storage rules in the food code.
  • Lack of food safety training costs points: Restaurants are often penalized for missing certifications or inadequate staff training in hygiene, allergens and safe food handling, issues experts say are preventable with proper education.

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Evan Moore
The Charlotte Observer
Evan Moore is a service journalism reporter for the Charlotte Observer. He grew up in Denver, North Carolina, where he previously worked as a reporter for the Denver Citizen, and is a UNC Charlotte graduate.
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