Safe Bite Grade is independently calculated by Safe Bite Report based on public LDH inspection data. Not an official health department grade. Grade based on latest inspection cycle through 04/30/2026. Previous inspection history affects the grade. How we calculate.
A current state food safety certificate is not held by the owner or a designated employee of the establishment. [Repeat]
A missing food safety certificate means the person in charge may not have been trained to identify and prevent food safety hazards. Research shows that restaurants with certified managers have fewer critical violations.
Sewage is not disposed of through an approved sewerage system/facility. [Repeat]
Sewage is human and animal waste — it contains virtually every type of foodborne pathogen. Sewage contamination in a restaurant is an imminent health hazard that can simultaneously expose patrons to Norovirus, Hepatitis A, Salmonella, and parasites.
The plumbing system is not sized and installed in accordance with Chapter XIV of the State Sanitary Code. Grease trap needs pumping and clean out needs a new cap. [Repeat]
Roaches are present in the establishment. [Repeat]
Cockroaches crawl through drains, sewage, and waste then walk on food and prep surfaces, mechanically transferring bacteria like Salmonella and E. coli.
Floors are not clean. [Repeat]
Walls/ceilings or attached equipment are not clean. [Repeat]
Walls/ceilings or attached equipment are not in good repair. [Repeat]
Non-food contact surfaces are not cleaned at a frequency necessary to preclude accumulation of soil residues. [Repeat]
Cutting boards, slicers, prep tables, and utensils that aren't clean become vehicles for spreading bacteria and viruses between food items. A dirty slicer used for deli meat is a classic Listeria transmission pathway.
A sanitizer test kit is not provided to accurately measure the concentration in mg/L or parts per million of sanitizing solution provided. [Repeat]
Clean equipment/utensils are not stored covered or inverted. [Repeat]
Soap and/or paper towels are not provided for use at the hand wash lavatory. [Repeat]
The hand wash lavatory is used for purpose other than hand washing. [Repeat]
Floors are not clean. [Repeat]
Walls/ceilings or attached equipment are not in good repair. [Repeat]
The toilet room fixtures are not clean. [Repeat]
Raw animal food is not separated from ready to eat food| or is placed| stored or displayed above ready to eat food. [Corrected]
Raw meat, poultry, and seafood carry dangerous bacteria. When they aren't separated from other foods, bacteria can transfer to items that will be eaten without further cooking.
Food contact surfaces and utensils are not clean to sight and touch.
Cutting boards, slicers, prep tables, and utensils that aren't clean become vehicles for spreading bacteria and viruses between food items. A dirty slicer used for deli meat is a classic Listeria transmission pathway.
Chemicals are stored with/above food| equipment| utensils| linens| single-service or single use articles. [Corrected]
Cleaning chemicals, pesticides, and degreasers stored near food or food-contact surfaces can spill, leak, or produce fumes that contaminate food. Chemical poisoning from contaminated food can cause severe burns, organ damage, and death.
Employee did not wash hands and exposed portions of arms at appropriate time. [Corrected][Repeat]
Unwashed hands are the #1 way restaurant workers spread Norovirus — which causes half of all food poisoning outbreaks. An infected worker can carry billions of virus particles; it only takes a few to make you sick.
A current state food safety certificate is not held by the owner or a designated employee of the establishment.
A missing food safety certificate means the person in charge may not have been trained to identify and prevent food safety hazards. Research shows that restaurants with certified managers have fewer critical violations.
Sewage is not disposed of through an approved sewerage system/facility.
Sewage is human and animal waste — it contains virtually every type of foodborne pathogen. Sewage contamination in a restaurant is an imminent health hazard that can simultaneously expose patrons to Norovirus, Hepatitis A, Salmonella, and parasites.
The plumbing system is not sized and installed in accordance with Chapter XIV of the State Sanitary Code. Grease trap needs pumping and clean out needs a new cap.
Rodents are present in the establishment.
Rodents contaminate food and surfaces with urine, droppings, and hair. They carry Salmonella and pathogenic E. coli that can cause severe food poisoning.
Floors are not clean.
Walls/ceilings or attached equipment are not in good repair.
The toilet room fixtures are not clean.
Floors are not clean.
Walls/ceilings or attached equipment are not in good repair.
Non-food contact surfaces are not cleaned at a frequency necessary to preclude accumulation of soil residues. [Repeat]
Cutting boards, slicers, prep tables, and utensils that aren't clean become vehicles for spreading bacteria and viruses between food items. A dirty slicer used for deli meat is a classic Listeria transmission pathway.
A sanitizer test kit is not provided to accurately measure the concentration in mg/L or parts per million of sanitizing solution provided. [Repeat]
Clean equipment/utensils are not stored covered or inverted.
Soap and/or paper towels are not provided for use at the hand wash lavatory. [Repeat]
The hand wash lavatory is used for purpose other than hand washing. [Repeat]
Employee did not wash hands and exposed portions of arms at appropriate time. [Corrected]
Unwashed hands are the #1 way restaurant workers spread Norovirus — which causes half of all food poisoning outbreaks. An infected worker can carry billions of virus particles; it only takes a few to make you sick.
Employee was drinking in a food preparation or other area where food equipment, utensils or other items requiring protection were stored. [Corrected]
Employee beverages in food preparation areas create contamination risk through spills and through hand-to-mouth-to-food contact. An infected employee's drink can become a transmission vehicle.
Single use gloves were used for more than one purpose. [Corrected]
Food contact surfaces and utensils are not clean to sight and touch. [Corrected][Repeat]
Cutting boards, slicers, prep tables, and utensils that aren't clean become vehicles for spreading bacteria and viruses between food items. A dirty slicer used for deli meat is a classic Listeria transmission pathway.
An approved sanitizer is not being used during manual or mechanical warewashing. [Corrected]
Cleaning removes visible dirt, but only sanitizing kills the invisible bacteria and viruses that cause food poisoning. Without sanitizer, surfaces that look clean can still spread Norovirus, Salmonella, and Listeria.
Chemicals are stored with/above food, equipment, utensils, linens, single-service or single use articles. [Corrected]
Cleaning chemicals, pesticides, and degreasers stored near food or food-contact surfaces can spill, leak, or produce fumes that contaminate food. Chemical poisoning from contaminated food can cause severe burns, organ damage, and death.
Food is not stored in a clean, covered container. [Repeat]
Non-food contact surfaces are not cleaned at a frequency necessary to preclude accumulation of soil residues.
Cutting boards, slicers, prep tables, and utensils that aren't clean become vehicles for spreading bacteria and viruses between food items. A dirty slicer used for deli meat is a classic Listeria transmission pathway.
A sanitizer test kit is not provided to accurately measure the concentration in mg/L or parts per million of sanitizing solution provided.
Soap and/or paper towels are not provided for use at the hand wash lavatory. [Corrected]
Walls/ceilings or attached equipment are not clean. Behind the fryer [Repeat]
Official Inspection Reports
Louisiana Department of Health
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