It Could Soon Be Legal to Sell Food from Your Own Kitchen in California
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Home cooks may soon be able to monetize their skills in California: Legislation recently passed in the state’s Health Committee that would make it legal to sell homemade food out of personal kitchens for a profit.
The bill was introduced in February by State Assemblyman Eduardo Garcia, who said that his legislation is meant be “a pathway to attain income self-sufficiency and achieve [the] ‘American dream’ of success.”
Under current California law, individuals are only allowed to sell food through retail facilities, or through a short list of “cottage food operations,” which are allowed to prepare “non-potentially hazardous foods.”
What’s in the New Bill
The new bill would allow home kitchen operations, to be considered a “food facility” under the Health and Safety Code, but there are strict rules regarding what constitutes a “home kitchen operation”: They can only have one full-time employee (excluding employees who are members of the household), and the food has to be prepared, cooked, and picked up by the customer or served on the same day. They must also cap their annual profits at $50,000.