These Houston County restaurants capture perfect scores on recent health inspections
Multiple Houston County restaurants captured perfect scores of 100 during the most recent round of routine health inspections.
The top scorers were among most restaurants in the county that earned “A’s” from June 1 to June 30, according to what was reported on the Georgia Department of Public Health online portal.
Meanwhile, a dozen other restaurants received “B’s,” three restaurants received “C’s” and none failed their routine health inspections.
Top Scorers
These Warner Robins restaurants earned perfect scores of 100:
- Baja Fresh, 810 Ga. 96, Suite 100-200
- Cinnaholic, 810 Ga. 96, Suite 1100
- Bojangles, 850 Ga. 96
- Burger King, 851 Warren Drive
- Taco Bell, 829 Russell Parkway
- Taco Bell, 715 Lake Joy Road
- Sonny’s BBQ, 811 Russell Parkway
- Longhorn Steakhouse, 2901 Watson Blvd.
- Chick-fil-A, 621 Russell Parkway
- 96 Nutrition, 810 Ga. 96, Suite 800
- Georgia Bob’s, 1882 Russell Parkway
- All About Health, 4993 Russell Parkway, Suite 160-170
- Panera Bread, 2971 Watson Blvd., Suite 200
- Wild Wing Cafe, 714 Lake Joy Road
- IHOP, 2710 Watson Blvd.
- Props, 1289 South Houston Lake Road
These Perry restaurants and a bar also earned perfect scores:
- Cook Out, 1340 Sam Nunn Blvd.
- Kentucky Fried Chicken, 1416 Sam Nunn Blvd.
- Cracker Barrel, 101 Lect Drive
- Marco’s Pizza, 273 Perry Parkway, Suite J
- Burger King, 1000 St. Patricks Drive
- Main Street Bar, 740 Main St.
Other top scorers
- The Georgia Dog, inside the Houston County Galleria, 2922 Watson Blvd., Centerville
- Meechie’s Dserts & Dinner, 3510 U.S. 41, Suite 2004, Byron mailing address but near U.S. 41 and Gunn Road.
- Big Picture Burgers, 1114 Ga. 96, Suite D-2, Kathleen
These mobile businesses operating in Houston County also earned perfect scores:
- O Taste and See
- Frog’s Greatest Sno
- Hank’s Food Truck (Dog Gone It Anyway You Want It)
State health inspectors assign grades based on how many points are deducted from 100, with scores at 69 and below considered failing.
Here’s how the scores break down: “A” for a score between 90 to 100 and denotes “food safety excellence.” “B” for a score between 80 to 89, considered “satisfactory compliance.” “C” for “marginal compliance” based on a score of 70-79. A “U” for “unsatisfactory compliance” is given when a restaurant scores 69 or less.
Restaurant inspections are designed to protect public health. The Telegraph reviews the inspection reports monthly.