Use separate boards
One for raw meat, one for veggies, one for bread
Wash immediately
Don’t let food sit and stain
Air dry upright
Prevents moisture and bacteria growth
Check dishwasher safety
Some plastic boards warp or crack in high heat
Never use bleach on porous boards
Can seep in and linger — use only on non-porous surfaces
Also, consider color-coding your boards:
Red = raw meat
Green = veggies
Blue = fish
Yellow = poultry
It’s a pro move that prevents cross-contamination.
🧠 Final Thoughts: Sometimes the Most Important Tool in Your Kitchen Is the One You’re Not Cleaning
We obsess over knives.
We upgrade our pans.
We buy fancy oils.
But we forget the surface where it all happens.
Your cutting board isn’t just a stage for chopping — it’s a food safety checkpoint .
And if it’s not clean?
Everything you make could be at risk.
So next time you finish cooking…
Don’t just rinse and go.
Scrub.
Sanitize.
Air dry.
Because sometimes, the difference between a safe meal and a sick stomach…
Isn’t in the ingredients.
It’s in the board.
And once you start cleaning it right?
You’ll never look at it the same way again.
