Business & Tech

Chantilly Restaurant Inspections

Health Department officials inspected numerous restaurants in Chantilly in recent weeks. We all want to know how our favorite restaurants stack up on cleanliness and sanitation.

"Ideally, an operation would have no critical violations, or none which are not corrected immediately and not repeated. In our experience, it is unrealistic to expect that a complex, full-service food operation can routinely avoid any violations," according to Virginia Department of Health's website.

The site continues: "Keep in mind that any inspection report is a 'snapshot' of the day and time of the inspection. On any given day, a restaurant could have fewer or more violations than noted in the report. An inspection conducted on any given day may not be representative of the overall, long term cleanliness of an establishment."

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

Full reports can be accessed on the health department's website.

These are the most recent inspection reports available from the health department. Click on the restaurant name (or "see the full report") for more information on each. 

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

Courtyard Dulles Chantilly, 3935 Centreview Dr., June 20

1 critical item, 1 non-critical item; some corrected during inspection. See the full report here.

Jimmy John's Gourmet Sandwiches4300 Chantilly Shopping Center, May 9

0 critical items, 0 non-critical items

Kid Junction4090-E Lafayette Center Drive, June 20/June 26

(Routine Inspection) June 20: 5 critical, 4 non-critical; see the full report here.

(Follow-up Inspection) June 26: 0 critical, 0 non-critical; see the full report here.

Genghis Grill, 14410 Chantilly Crossing Lane, May 31

2 critical, 3 non-critical items; see the full report here.

There are three main types of violations, according to the health department:

·       A core item "usually relates to general sanitation, operational controls, sanitation standard operating procedures (SSOPs), facilities or structures, equipment design, or general maintenance."

·       A priority item is "a provision in this Code whose application contributes directly to the elimination, prevention or reduction to an acceptable level, hazards associated with foodborne illness or injury and there is no other provision that more directly controls the hazard," and "includes items with a quantifiable measure to show control of hazards such as cooking, reheating, cooling, handwashing."

·       A priority foundation item "includes an item that requires the purposeful incorporation of specific actions, equipment or procedures by industry management to attain control of risk factors that contribute to foodborne illness or injury such as personnel training, infrastructure or necessary equipment, HACCP plans, documentation or record keeping, and labeling."


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here