A Comprehensive List of Food Safety Tips
Whether you have a career in food preparation, entertain privately, or just
cook for your family, food handling has some science to it that you should
know. What with hearing a story in the news every other day about yet
another Salmonella or E. Coli outbreak, We could all stand to hear a
refresher course in the sanitary preparing of food.
Handling food
Wash and dry hands thoroughly before handling food. Always
use clean kitchen utensils for handling foods. Keep raw and cooked food
apart at all times. Apply this especially to raw meat, fish, and poultry.
Keep these away from cooked foods and ready-to-eat foods. Wash and dry
hands, utensils, cutting boards, knives, and flat surfaces thoroughly after
preparing raw meat, fish, poultry and other
raw foods and before contact with other food. Ideally you
should use separate cutting boards for raw and cooked foods. Never put
cooked food onto a plate which has previously held these raw foods until it
has been washed. Do not use the same utensil to stir or serve a cooked meal
that was used to prepare the raw ingredients.
Vegetables of the root family such as potatoes, leeks
and carrots often have traces of soil on them which can contain harmful
bacteria, so wash them thoroughly before use. As a rule you should wash
other fruit and vegetables too, especially if they are going to be eaten
raw. Avoid preparing food for yourself or others if you are sick.
Defrosting
when cooking packaged
frozen foods always follow instructions provided for defrosting
or cooking directly from frozen. If cooking from frozen allow sufficient
time for food to be thoroughly cooked and check it before serving; an extra
minute in the fryer won't hurt it. When defrosting foods make sure they are
fully defrosted before cooking; being sure to allow food enough time to
thaw. Never re-freeze food once it has started to thaw.
Thaw food by placing it on the bottom shelf of the
fridge in a container to catch any juices, or in a bin or rack over a sink.
These juices will often be contaminated so wash dishes and hands thoroughly
after use. Only thaw food in a microwave oven if it is to be cooked
immediately. To thaw very large meat items like turkeys, leg of lamb, etc.
more quickly, let them defrost outside of the fridge. Put them in a cool
place and make sure they are completely thaWed before cooking.
Cooking and heating
Follow recipes and label instructions on cooking
times and temperatures.
Remember to preheat the oven properly – the
instructions for preheating take into account that the cooking time should
be at the full temperature. Cook all foods until they are piping hot.
Remember that sausages, burgers,
pork and poultry are cooked all the way through and they should not be rare
or pink in the middle. As a test, pierce it with a knife; any juices that
run out of the meat should be clear, not bloody. Lamb and beef (except when
minced or rolled) can be eaten rare, but you should make sure the outer
surface is thoroughly cooked to kill any germs on the surface of the meat.
Elderly or sick people, babies, young children and pregnant
women should only eat eggs cooked until both yolk and white
are solid and should never eat raw or partially cooked
seafood. Don't cook foods too far in advance. Once cooked,
foods should be kept covered and piping hot (above 145F)
until it's time to serve them. Keep prepared cold foods in
the fridge until you are ready to serve them.
When using a microwave, stir foods and drinks and allow them
to stand for a couple of minutes to avoid hot or cold spots.
Check that food is hot throughout before serving. Foods that
are not thoroughly cooked should be re-heated for another
few minutes, but when it comes to microwaves food should not
be reheated more than twice.
Cooling
Never put hot food directly into the fridge or
freezer, let it cool sufficiently first. Cooling should be
completed within one or two hours after cooking. To speed
cooling you can divide foods into smaller portions, place in
a wide dish and stand this in a shallow tray of cold water.
Extra care for babies
Because babies' immune systems are
less developed than those of an adult, they are at a greater
risk of illness. To take extra care for young babies, wash
bottles and utensils in hot soapy water and sterilize them
using a sterilizing solution or a steam sterilizer. When
adding water to baby foods, milks and other drinks always
use bottled water and never water straight from the sink
tap. Cook foods thoroughly until piping hot and cool them
rapidly until they are comfortable to eat.
Extra care with barbecues and grills
cooking food
outdoors, particularly for large groups, can increase the
risk of food poisoning. It's harder to keep foods very hot
or very cold and to keep everything clean. But with a little
extra care barbecues and outdoor grills can be used safely.
Light the barbecue Well in advance, making sure that you use enough charcoal
and wait until it is glowing red with a powdery gray surface before starting
to cook. Keep meats, salads and other perishable food in the fridge, or in
an ice-packed portable cooler box, until just before you are ready to cook
them. Serve salads at the last minute. Ideally use separate cooler boxes for
raw meats and ready-to-eat foods. Cooler boxes can only keep food cool for a
limited period so cook sooner rather than later. Better still,
if
possible, fully pre-cook all poultry and sausages in an indoor kitchen and
then take them straight to the barbecue to add the final barbecue flavor.
During cooking, turn food often. If it starts to burn on the
outside raise the grill height or reduce the heat of the
charcoal. You reduce charcoal's heat by dampening the coals
slightly or partially closing the air vents. As always, cook
poultry, burgers, pork and sausages throughout with no pink
bits in the middle. Keep raw and cooked foods apart at all
times.
Don't handle cooked foods with utensils that have touched
raw meats and don't put cooked or ready-to-eat foods such as
salad and bread on plates that have held raw meats.