Keeping Your Kitchen Safe
Beef Food Safety Tips from Peggy Bledsoe, Houston County
Extension Agent
There’s an invisible enemy in your kitchen ready to strike. You
know him as bacteria! You can’t see him, smell him or feel him,
but he can make you and those you care about sick. He can invade
the food you eat and cause food borne illness. You can fight
bacteria and make the meals and snacks you prepare safe by
following four easy steps! Clean-Separate-Cook- and Chill!
First, let’s focus on clean! Bacteria can spread throughout the
kitchen and get into cutting boards, utensils, sponges and
counter tops. Therefore, wash hands and surfaces often. Wash
your hands with hot soapy water before handling food and after
using the bathroom, changing diapers and handling pets.
Use plastic or other non-porous cutting boards. These boards
should be run through the dishwasher or washed in hot soapy
water after use and rinsed. Make a sanitizing solution, using
one teaspoon of chlorine bleach to 1 quart of water to sanitize
utensils and washed surfaces.
Counter tops, dishes and utensils should be washed after
preparing each food item and before you move on to the next
item.
Use paper towels or clean cloths to wipe up kitchen surfaces or
spills. These cloths should be washed often in the hot cycle of
your washing machine.
Next, think about separate. Bacteria can spread from one food
product to another. This is especially true when handling raw
meats, poultry and seafood. Therefore, keep these foods and
their juices away from ready-to-eat foods.
Separate raw meats, poultry and seafood from other foods in your
grocery cart and in your refrigerator. Store ready-to-eat foods
in the upper portion of your refrigerator and store raw meats
below them.
Always wash hands cutting boards, dishes and utensils with hot
soapy water after they come in contact with raw meats, poultry
and seafood.
Never place cooked food on a plate which previously held raw
meat, poultry or seafood.
The next step is cook. Food safety experts agree that foods are
properly cooked when they are heated for a long enough time and
at a high enough temperature to kill the harmful bacteria that
cause food borne illness.
Always use a clean thermometer, which measures the internal
temperature of cooked foods, to make sure meat, poultry,
casseroles and other foods are cooked thoroughly.
Cook roasts and steaks to at least 145ø F. Whole poultry should
be cooked to 180ø F. for doneness.
Cook ground beef , where bacteria can spread during processing,
to at least 160ø F. If a thermometer is not available, do not
eat ground beef that is still pink inside.
Bring sauces, soups and gravy to a boil when reheating. Heat
other leftovers thoroughly.
When preparing food in the oven, set the oven to at least 325ø
F. Cook food to the safe recommended temperature. Always check
the temperature in several places with a food thermometer.
If
you are using a convection oven to prepare food, you may reduce
the oven temperature by 25ø F.
The last step is chill. Refrigerate foods quickly because cold
temperatures keep harmful bacteria from growing and multiplying.
Your refrigerator should be set at 40ø F or lower and the
freezer at 0ø F. Use an appliance thermometer to check these
temperatures occasionally.
Refrigerate or freeze perishables, prepared foods and leftovers
within two hours or sooner.
Never defrost food at room temperature. Thaw food in the
refrigerator, under cold running water or in the microwave.
Marinate foods in the refrigerator. Use food grade plastic,
stainless steel or glass containers. Marinade must be boiled
before it can be used as a sauce. Do not reuse marinade for
other foods.
Divide food into shallow containers. For example, slice road
beef into portions for service. Be sure containers do not exceed
4 inches in depth. Place food in the refrigerator
Don’t overfill the refrigerator. Cool air must circulate to keep
food safe.
Clean, separate, cook and chill are simple concepts, yet we
often fail to follow them when handling food. Review your food
safety practices. Determine where you need to make improvements.
Practice-Clean, separate, cook and chill and make the food you
serve your family as safe as possible. |