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Safe steps in food handling, cooking,
and storage are essential to prevent foodborne illness. You
can't see, smell, or taste harmful bacteria that may cause
illness. In every step of food preparation, follow the four
Fight BAC!™ guidelines to keep food safe:
• Clean -- Wash hands and surfaces often.
• Separate -- Don't cross-contaminate.
• Cook -- Cook to proper temperatures.
• Chill -- Refrigerate promptly.
Shopping
• Purchase refrigerated or frozen items after selecting your non-perishables.
• Never choose meat or poultry in packaging that is torn or leaking.
• Do not buy food past "Sell-By," "Use-By," or other
expiration dates.
Storage
• Always refrigerate perishable food within 2 hours (1 hour when the temperature
is above 90 °F).
• Check the temperature of your refrigerator and freezer with an appliance
thermometer. The refrigerator should be at 40 °F or below and the freezer
at 0 °F or below.
• Cook or freeze fresh poultry, fish, ground meats, and variety meats within
2 days; other beef, veal, lamb, or pork, within 3 to 5 days.
• Perishable food such as meat and poultry should be wrapped securely to
maintain quality and to prevent meat juices from getting onto other food.
• To maintain quality when freezing meat and poultry in its original package,
wrap the package again with foil or plastic wrap that is recommended for the
freezer.
• In general, high-acid canned food such as tomatoes, grapefruit, and pineapple
can be stored on the shelf for 12 to 18 months. Low-acid canned food such as
meat, poultry, fish, and most vegetables will keep 2 to 5 years -- if the can
remains in good condition and has been stored in a cool, clean, and dry place.
Discard cans that are dented, leaking, bulging, or rusted.
Preparation
• Always wash hands before and after handling food.
• Don't cross-contaminate. Keep raw meat, poultry, fish, and their juices
away from other food. After cutting raw meats, wash hands, cutting board, knife,
and counter tops with hot, soapy water.
• Marinate meat and poultry in a covered dish in the refrigerator.
• Sanitize cutting boards by using a solution of 1 teaspoon chlorine bleach
in 1 quart of water.
Thawing
• Refrigerator: The refrigerator allows slow, safe thawing. Make sure thawing
meat and poultry juices do not drip onto other food.
• Cold Water: For faster thawing, place food in a leak-proof plastic bag.
Submerge in cold tap water. Change the water every 30 minutes. Cook immediately
after thawing.
• Microwave: Cook meat and poultry immediately after microwave thawing.
Cooking
• Cook ground meats to 160 °F; ground poultry to 165 °F.
• Beef, veal, and lamb steaks, roasts, and chops may be cooked to 145 °F;
all cuts of fresh pork, 160 °F.
• Whole poultry should reach 180 °F in the thigh; breasts, 170 °F.
Serving
• Hot food should be held at 140 °F or warmer.
• Cold food should be held at 40 °F or colder.
• When serving food at a buffet, keep food hot with chafing dishes, slow
cookers, and warming trays. Keep food cold by nesting dishes in bowls of ice
or use small serving trays and replace them often.
• Perishable food should not be left out more than 2 hours at room temperature
(1 hour when the temperature is above 90 °F).
Leftovers
• Discard any food left out at room temperature for more than 2 hours (1
hour if the temperature was above 90 °F).
• Place food into shallow containers and immediately put in the refrigerator
or freezer for rapid cooling.
• Use cooked leftovers within 4 days.
Refreezing
Meat and poultry defrosted in the refrigerator may be refrozen before or after
cooking. If thawed by other methods, cook before refreezing.
Cold Storage Chart
These short, but safe, time limits will help keep refrigerated food from spoiling
or becoming dangerous to eat. Because freezing keeps food safe indefinitely,
recommended storage times are for quality only.
1-2 Days in Refrigerator; 1-2 Months in Freezer
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