| PREPARING
MEALS AT HOME |
Purchasing
At the Grocery Store
- Pay attention to "sell by"
and "use by" dates
on perishable products. If the "sell by"
date has expired, do not buy the product. The
"use by" date applies to use at home
after purchase. It's important to note that
these dates refer to quality of food (taste,
texture, smell, appearance) and are not a guarantee
of an uncontaminated product, particularly after
the original package seal is opened.
- Be sure that packaging/storage is as it should
be: refrigerated foods should be kept cold;
frozen foods should be frozen solid; there should
be no holes or tears in the packaging.
- When possible, put raw poultry, meat or fish
in separate plastic bags before setting in your
cart with other unprotected foods. Occasionally,
packaging on these products may allow leakage.
- Select perishable food products, including
meat, last before checking out, and place them
in the coolest spot in your car for the trip
home. If food will be held in the car for longer
than thirty minutes, store it in a cooler immediately
after purchase to keep it cold.
Home
Storage
- Place perishable foods immediately into the
refrigerator or freezer upon returning home
from the grocery store.
- Place meat, fish and poultry in the coldest
part of the refrigerator (on a low shelf at
the back). Use beef steaks, roasts and deli
meats and poultry within 3 to 4 days. Ground
meat, ground poultry and fish should be used
within 1 to 2 days.
- Place uncooked meat, fish and poultry products
in separate plastic bags and set on a plate
on the lowest shelf of the refrigerator so raw
juices do not drip onto other foods.
- Using a refrigerator thermometer, check the
refrigerator's temperature to ensure that it
is cooling at 35°F to 40°F,
and the freezer is at or below 0°
F.
- Space items in the refrigerator and freezer
so that air can circulate freely around them.
- Keep the interior of the refrigerator/freezer
clean. Pack perishables in coolers when cleaning
or defrosting your refrigerator/freezer.
Freezing
and Defrosting
- To preserve food quality, traditional plastic
wraps are not suitable for long-term freezing.
Rewrap or overwrap meat with freezer storage
bags, protective moisture or vapor-proof freezer
or foil wrap for freezer storage. Wrap raw meat,
fish and poultry carefully to protect other
foods from juices that may leak.
- To thaw meat, fish and poultry safely, take
it out of the freezer and place in the refrigerator.
Place in a plastic bag or in a pan or dish to
prevent juices from dripping onto other foods.
A one-inch steak will thaw in 12 to 14 hours.
Allow 4 to 7 hours per pound to thaw a large
roast and 3 to 5 hours per pound for a small
roast. A one-inch thick package of ground beef
will defrost in 24 hours. For quick thawing,
use the microwave oven according to manufacturer's
directions and then cook defrosted food immediately.
- Never defrost meat, poultry or fish on the
kitchen counter or in warm water. Bacteria multiply
rapidly at temperatures 40°
- 140°F.
Food
Preparation
- Keep everything that touches food clean -
hands, utensils, bowls, countertops. Wash hands
with warm, soapy water prior to preparing any
food, and after handling raw meat, poultry and
fish. Use separate platters, cutting boards,
trays and utensils for cooked and uncooked meat,
poultry and fish.
- Keep juices from raw meat, poultry and fish
from coming into contact with other foods, cooked
or raw. Always wash contact surfaces and utensils
with warm, soapy water immediately after preparing
these products.
- When using a cutting board, it is best to
use separate boards for each food type. Never
use the same cutting board for raw meat or poultry
that is used for cooked and ready-to-eat foods.
Wash food preparation surfaces thoroughly with
warm, soapy water and then sanitize the surface
after each use. To sanitize cutting surfaces,
wash with a solution of 2 to 3 teaspoons of
household bleach in one quart of warm water.
Rinse with plain hot water.
- Never eat raw seafood, meat, poultry, eggs
(or foods containing raw eggs such as homemade
salad dressing, mayonnaise, ice cream or cookie
dough). Never drink unpasteurized milk or other
unpasteurized dairy products.
- Direct sneezes and coughs away from food;
cover mouth and nose with tissue when sneezing
or coughing; wash hands after sneezing or coughing.
- Thoroughly wash all produce with clean, drinkable
water; use a brush if necessary.
When marinating meat, seafood or poultry, use
a covered, non-metallic container and place
it in the refrigerator. Ingredients in marinades
such as wine, vinegar and lemon juice are acidic
and will cause a chemical reaction with some
metals. When this happens the metal will leach
into the food being marinated.
- Avoid mixing dark colored sauces (such as
teriyaki, Worcestershire or soy sauces) in with
ground meat or poultry as they make it more
difficult to judge doneness. Instead, brush
sauces on the cooked surface of the patty about
midway through the cooking cycle. Be careful
not to recontaminate fully cooked meat or poultry
by adding sauce with a brush which was used
on raw or undercooked foods.
- Do not use marinade which has been in contact
with raw meat, fish or poultry as a sauce for
the cooked food without first bringing the marinade
to a boil for at least one minute.
Cooking
- Cook ground meat thoroughly, to a uniform
internal temperature of 160°F,
or until the center is no longer pink. Ground
poultry should be cooked to at least 165 °F.
Juices in done ground meat and poultry will
run clear.
- Use a meat thermometer for roasts, thick
steaks (over two inches thick) and poultry,
placing it at the thickest portion of the meat,
not touching bone or fat.
- Cook roasts to 5°F below
the following recommended internal temperatures
for doneness of meats: medium rare (150°F),
medium (160°F), well done
(170°F). Roast temperatures
rise approximately 5 during standing time (allow
10 - 15 minutes). Poultry should be cooked to
170°F and pork to 160°F.
- Avoid very low oven temperature roasting
methods (below 300°F) and
long or overnight cooking of meats, which may
encourage bacterial growth before cooking is
complete. Do not use brown paper bags for roasting
- they may not be sanitary and are not recommended
for use as cooking material.
- Cook stuffing for turkey or chicken separately
from the poultry instead of in cavity of bird.
- Don't interrupt cooking by partially cooking
food and then finishing later. Partially cooked
food may not reach a temperature sufficient
to destroy bacteria and may even encourage bacterial
growth.
- When basting or applying a sauce during grilling
or broiling, brush the sauce on cooked surfaces
only. Be careful not to recontaminate fully
cooked meat or poultry by adding a sauce with
a brush previously used on raw or undercooked
foods.
Serving
- Do not leave cooked meat or other perishable
foods out at room temperature for longer than
two hours.
- When serving from a buffet, keep cold foods
on ice at a temperature below 40°F,
and keep hot foods at an internal temperature
of at least 140°F. When
replenishing the buffet, do not mix fresh food
with food that has already been out for serving.
- If a marinade that has been in contact with
raw meat, poultry or fish is to be served as
a sauce, heat to a rolling boil and boil for
at least one minute. A better alternative is
to mix a double batch of marinade; reserve half
for marinating the food and half to use as a
sauce. Use separate plates, platters or trays
for holding raw and cooked meat, fish and poultry.
Utensils and knives should be washed with warm
soapy water in between contact with raw and
cooked foods.
Leftovers
- Freeze or refrigerate leftovers immediately.
For more rapid cooling, use small shallow containers
(less than two inches deep) to freeze and refrigerate
leftovers. Cut large portions into smaller portions
to speed cooling time. Leftover meat, fish and
poultry should be wrapped securely before refrigeration,
eaten within 3 to 4 days, and reheated to 160°F
or until steaming hot at time of consumption.
- Sauces and gravies should be reheated to
a rolling boil for at least one minute before
serving.
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| AWAY-FROM-HOME
SITUATIONS
|
Day
Care
- Make sure that day care center employees practice
appropriate sanitation and food handling. Parents
and other care providers should teach children
to wash hands with warm, soapy water after going
to the bathroom and before touching or eating
food. It is critical for child care providers
and parents to remember to wash hands with warm
soapy water after every diaper change or check.
Leisure/Picnic
- Do not use your cooler to chill room temperature
foods. Pack chilled foods (below 40°F)
in a cooler with ice or ice packs. This is particularly
important if you do not plan to eat for several
hours. When finished serving cold foods, promptly
return them to the cooler. If you are taking
meat, poultry or fish to grill while picnicking,
pack these items carefully to avoid leakage
onto other foods. Take along moistened towelettes
to wash up with after handling the uncooked
meat, poultry or fish, or use a bottle filled
with clean water and soap to wash hands and
surfaces.
Restaurant/Fast-food
Restaurants
- Make sure meat, fish and poultry are cooked
thoroughly (see "Cooking" section).
- Check to see that burgers are cooked until
the center is no longer pink and the juices
run clear.
- At buffets and salad bars, make sure cold
foods are cold (below 40°F)
and hot foods are hot (above 140°F).
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Reference:
For more information on fighting the problem of
foodborne illness, visit Fight Bac created by
the Partnership for Food Safety Education. |
Resources
National Cattlemen's Beef Association
Consumer Information Department
USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline
Mon. - Fri., 10am - 4pm ET
(800) 535-4555
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Foodborne Illness Line
24-hour recorded information
(404) 332-4597
This document has been reviewed by:
Mildred Cody, PhD, RD on behalf of The American Dietetic
Association
Michael Doyle, PhD, Department of Food Safety and Quality
Enhancement, University of Georgia
Alan Harris, MD, Department of Infectious Diseases,
Rush Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center
Betsy Hornick, MS, RD, The American Dietetic Association
John Marcello, RS, The National Restaurant Association
Education Foundation
Michael Pariza, PhD, Department of Food Microbiology
and Toxicology, University of Wisconsin
Morris Potter, DVM, MS, Division of Bacterial and Mycotic
Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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