Tennessee Cleaning and Sanitizing ServSafe Practice Test
Practice with real TN Cleaning & Sanitizing exam questions and detailed explanations. 1,000+ real questions across all 7 exam sections.
Questions
~10 scored questions on the exam
Passing Score
75% overall (60/80)%
Time Limit
2 hours for the full exam
Prerequisites
None — anyone can take the ServSafe Manager exam
What is the Cleaning and Sanitizing Test?
Cleaning and Sanitizing covers the procedures and standards for keeping food-contact surfaces, equipment, and facilities properly cleaned and sanitized. This includes chemical sanitizer concentrations, warewashing methods, and establishing effective cleaning schedules.
Covers proper cleaning and sanitizing procedures, chemical concentrations, and warewashing
Topic Breakdown
Cleaning vs. Sanitizing
~3 questions
- The difference between cleaning, sanitizing, and disinfecting
- When to clean and when to sanitize
- Steps for proper cleaning and sanitizing procedure
Sanitizer Types & Concentrations
~3 questions
- Chlorine, quaternary ammonium (quat), and iodine sanitizers
- Proper concentration levels and testing procedures
- Water temperature and contact time requirements
Warewashing
~2 questions
- Three-compartment sink procedures (wash, rinse, sanitize)
- Dishwasher temperature and chemical requirements
- Air-drying requirements and proper storage
Cleaning Schedules & Programs
~2 questions
- Creating and maintaining master cleaning schedules
- Cleaning frequency for different areas and equipment
- Training staff on proper cleaning procedures
Free Practice Questions
10 questionsQuestion 1 of 10
What is the fundamental difference between cleaning and sanitizing?
Browse Tennessee Cleaning & Sanitizing Questions
- 1. What is the fundamental difference between cleaning and sanitizing?
- 2. What is the correct order of steps when manually cleaning and sanitizing equipment?
- 3. How should sanitizer concentration be monitored throughout the day?
- 4. When cleaning stationary equipment like a slicer, what is the first step?
- 5. Equipment surfaces have been in continuous use for 5 hours at a busy restaurant. According to ServSafe guidelines, what should be done?
- 6. What information should be included in a master cleaning schedule?
- 7. Which surfaces are considered non-food-contact surfaces that need regular cleaning?
- 8. After sanitizing dishes in a three-compartment sink, what is the proper drying method?
- 9. A catering company uses quaternary ammonium (quat) sanitizer. What is typically the correct concentration range?
- 10. What is the correct chlorine concentration for a chemical sanitizing dishwasher?
Study Tips for Tennessee
- 1Memorize sanitizer concentrations: chlorine (50-99 ppm), quat (per manufacturer), iodine (12.5-25 ppm)
- 2Know the steps for cleaning and sanitizing: scrape, wash, rinse, sanitize, air dry
- 3Understand three-compartment sink setup and proper water temperatures
- 4Learn when food-contact surfaces must be cleaned and sanitized (every 4 hours, between tasks, after contamination)
- 5Review dishwasher requirements for both high-temperature and chemical sanitizing machines
Tennessee Food Safety Information
Manager Cert Required
Yes
Handler Cert Required
No
Certification Renewal
Every 5 years
Tennessee Department of Health
Official Food Safety Portal →Career Opportunities
Frequently Asked Questions
Cleaning removes visible food and dirt from surfaces using soap/detergent and water. Sanitizing reduces pathogens on clean surfaces to safe levels using heat or chemical solutions. Both steps are required — you must clean before sanitizing.
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