Kitchen Tips
Safe Kitchen Tips
Ninety-five percent of food-borne illness is probably preventable. Here are some
tips on what you can do:
At the Store
Don’t let juice from raw meat, poultry, or fish drip on to your hands or any
fresh foods in your grocery cart.
Raw juices may contain bacteria.Shop for cold and frozen products last. Use a
cooler for the ride home, especially during the summer or if you’re running
other errands.
Avoid unpasteurized milk and juice, and egg nog or other foods made with raw
eggs.
In the Kitchen
Always wash your hands in hot, soapy water before preparing and after handling
raw meat, poultry, seafood, or eggs.
Cook all meat and poultry—or casseroles that contain meat or poultry—at a
minimum oven temperature of 325°F.
Cook meats thoroughly, but don’t overcook them.
Heat kills bacteria, but too much heat causes meat, poultry, and fish to form
possibly carcinogenic compounds.
Use a meat thermometer in the thickest part of the meat, but don’t insert it
until the outside is seared or it could carry bacteria to the interior.
The USDA says to cook your meat at least to these internal temperatures: beef,
lamb, or veal roasts, steaks, and chops—145°F; ground beef, pork, lamb, or veal
and fresh pork—160°F; ground chicken or turkey or stuffing—165°F; poultry—180°F.
Keep your refrigerator at no more than 40°F and your freezer at 0°F.
Don’t store raw fish in your refrigerator for more than 24 hours. Raw poultry or
ground beef will keep for one to two days and raw red meat for three to five.
Thaw frozen food in the fridge or in a microwave, not at room temperature.
Never put cooked food on the plate used when it was raw.
To keep bacteria from growing, put your sponge or scouring pad in the dishwasher
every time you run it.