SHAH'S HALAL FOOD

GRADE A

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Overview

SHAH'S HALAL FOOD in East Midtown Turtle Bay received a Grade A on their NYC health inspection on December 2, 2025, scoring 12 points. The inspection found 1 violation, including 1 critical.

ROUNDUP See the daily roundup: 62 NYC Restaurants Earn Grade A Scores on March 16, 2026 →
Address
231 EAST 53 STREET
Manhattan, NY 10022
Cuisine
Middle Eastern
Inspection Type
Pre-permit (Operational) / Initial Inspection
Violations
1 total
⚠ 1 critical
Facility History
12 inspections

Violations Cited

⚠ CRITICAL 10H

Sanitization not provided for utensil washing

Single service article not provided. Single service article reused or not protected from contamination when transported, stored, dispensed. Drinking straws not completely enclosed in wrapper or dispensed from a sanitary device.

⚠️ Why This Matters

Unsanitized utensils transfer bacteria directly to customers' food and mouths

📋 Code Requirements

Use approved sanitizer at correct concentration; test strips required; proper contact time

CDC Risk Factor: Contaminated Equipment/Protection from Contamination
NYC Health Code Article 81, Section 81.21
Inspector's Action:

Violations were cited in the following area(s).

View Facility Profile →

SHAH'S HALAL FOOD — Inspection Questions

Did SHAH'S HALAL FOOD pass their NYC health inspection on December 2, 2025?
SHAH'S HALAL FOOD passed with an A grade on December 2, 2025 with a score of 12 points. The inspection found 1 violation(s).
What critical violations did SHAH'S HALAL FOOD have?
SHAH'S HALAL FOOD had 1 critical violation(s) during their inspection. Critical violations directly contribute to foodborne illness and must be corrected immediately. These include issues with temperature control, hand washing, cross-contamination, and pest infestations.
What does violation code 10H mean in NYC restaurant inspections?
NYC violation 10H (Sanitization not provided for utensil washing) is a major violation. Utensils must be properly sanitized after washing to kill remaining bacteria Unsanitized utensils transfer bacteria directly to customers' food and mouths