Picnic, Barbecue & Cookout
Food Safety Tips
- Try to plan just the right amount of foods to
take. That way, you won't have to worry about the
storage or safety of leftovers.
- If there are leftovers, throw them out unless
you can safely keep them chilled until you get home.
If there is still ice in the cooler when you get
home, the leftovers should be okay to eat. When in
doubt, throw it out! I hate to be wasteful, but when
it comes to food poisoning, it's better to be safe
than sorry. Any leftovers left outside for more than
an hour should be discarded.
- Clean preparation is essential. Wash hands and
work areas; be sure all utensils are clean before
preparing food.
- Foods that are cooked ahead need to be completed
in plenty of time to chill thoroughly in the
refrigerator before being packed (unless, of course
you are taking measures to transport and serve hot
food). Use an insulated cooler with sufficient ice
or ice packs to keep the food at 40°F or colder.
Pack food from the refrigerator right into the
cooler.
- Pack foods in the cooler in the order opposite
of how you'll be using them. In other words, pack
the food you'll need last at the bottom and so on.
- A cooler chest can also be used to keep hot food
hot. Line the cooler with a heavy kitchen towel for
extra insulation and place well wrapped hot foods
inside. It's amazing how long the foods will stay
not only warm, but hot. Try to use a cooler that is
just the right size to pack fairly tightly with hot
food so less heat escapes.
- Thermos bottles can keep stews or hot drinks at
the right temperature for hours. If foods are poured
boiling hot into sterilized bottles, there shouldn't
be a problem as long as they are still hot when it
comes time to eat.
- If you're planning on take-out foods such as
fried chicken or barbecued beef, eat them within two
hours of pick-up or buy ahead of time and chill
completely before packing the foods into the cooler.
- Don't pack coolers in the trunk, carry them
inside the air-conditioned car.
- As much as possible, keep coolers in the shade
while at the picnic.
- Keep cooler lids closed and avoid unnecessary
openings.
- It's a good idea to use a separate cooler for
drinks, so the one containing perishable food won't
be constantly opened and closed.
- Replenish the ice if it melts.
- When preparing chicken, egg, or cold meat
salads, or anything other recipes featuring
mayonnaise, refrigerate it as soon as possible, and
keep cold right up until packing time. Sometimes, I
will even give these types of items an extra shot of
cold by placing in them in the freezer for about
5-10 minutes before packing. This is just to insure
they are extra cold, do not freeze mayonnaise item
as it tends to separate.
- When preparing dishes like chicken or cooked
meat salads, use chilled ingredients. In other
words, make sure your cooked chicken has been cooked
and chilled before it gets mixed with other salad
ingredients.
- When handling raw meat, remove from the cooler
only the amount that will fit on the grill at that
time.
- The USDA recommends that you don't eat raw or
undercooked ground beef, since harmful bacteria
could be present.
- To be sure bacteria are destroyed, cook
hamburgers and ribs to 160 degrees F (medium
doneness) or until the center is no longer pink and
the juices are clear. Cook ground poultry to 165°F
and poultry parts to 180°F.
- Do not partially grill meat to use later. Once
you begin cooking meat by any method, cook until
completely done to assure that bacteria are
destroyed.
- Reheat precooked meats until steaming hot.
- When taking foods off the grill, put them on a
clean plate, not the same platter that held raw
meat.
- Never reuse marinades that have come in contact
with raw meat, chicken or fish, and don't put the
cooked food back into an unwashed container or dish
that contained the marinade.
- Reader Carolyn Kashat, Garden City, Michigan
says, "When I have a big barbecue party, I fill up a
hard plastic child’s pool with ice, then set the
food inside this."
- To clean foods that have burnt on a barbecue
grill, enclose them in a large plastic garbage bag.
Mix 1 cup baking soda with 1/2 cup ammonia, pour
over the grills, close the bag and let sit
overnight. The burnt on pieces will have loosened
making the grills easy to clean.
- Control the flames on a barbecue grill by having
a pint spray bottle of water mixed with 1 teaspoon
baking soda.
- Clean coolers with a water and baking solution
to eliminate odors.
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Go to the July/August 2002 Newsletter
30 Day Gourmet
P.O. Box 272
Brownsburg, IN 46112
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