|
A popular way to celebrate
holidays or any party occasion is to invite friends and family
to a buffet. However, this type of food service where foods
are left out for long periods leave the door open for uninvited
guests — bacteria that cause foodborne illness. Festive times
for giving and sharing should not include sharing foodborne
illness. Here are some tips from the USDA's Meat and Poultry
Hotline to help you have a SAFE holiday party.
Safe Food Handling
Always wash your hands before and after handling food. Keep
your kitchen, dishes and utensils clean also. Always serve food
on clean plates — not those previously holding raw meat and
poultry. Otherwise, bacteria which may have been present in
raw meat juices can cross contaminate the food to be served.
Cook Thoroughly
If you are cooking foods ahead of time for your party, be sure
to cook foods thoroughly to safe minimum internal temperatures.
- Beef, veal, and lamb steaks, roasts, and chops may be cooked to 145 °F.
- All cuts of pork to 160 °F.
- Ground beef, veal and lamb to 160 °F.
- All poultry should reach a safe minimum internal temperature of 165 °F.
Use Shallow Containers
Divide cooked foods into shallow containers to store in the
refrigerator or freezer until serving. This encourages rapid,
even cooling. Reheat hot foods to 165 °F. Arrange and serve
food on several small platters rather than on one large platter.
Keep the rest of the food hot in the oven (set at 200-250 °F)
or cold in the refrigerator until serving time. This way foods
will be held at a safe temperature for a longer period of time.
REPLACE empty platters rather than adding fresh food to a dish
that already had food in it. Many people's hands may have been
taking food from the dish, which has also been sitting out at
room temperature.
The Two-Hour Rule
Foods should not sit at room temperature for more than two hours.
Keep track of how long foods have been sitting on the buffet
table and discard anything there two hours or more.
Keep Hot Foods HOT And Cold Foods COLD
Hot foods should be held at 140 °F or warmer. On the buffet
table you can keep hot foods hot with chafing dishes, slow cookers,
and warming trays. Cold foods should be held at 40 °F or
colder. Keep foods cold by nesting dishes in bowls of ice. Otherwise,
use small serving trays and replace them.
Foodborne Bacteria
Bacteria are everywhere but a few types especially like to crash
parties. Staphylococcus aureus, Clostridium perfringens
and Listeria monocytogenes frequent people's hands
and steam tables. And unlike microorganisms that cause food
to spoil, harmful or pathogenic bacteria cannot be smelled or
tasted. Prevention is safe food handling.
If illness occurs, however, contact a health professional and
describe the symptoms.
Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus
("staph") bacteria are found on our skin, in infected cuts and
pimples, and in our noses and throats. They are spread by improper
food handling. Prevention includes washing hands and utensils
before preparing and handling foods and not letting prepared
foods — particularly cooked and cured meats and cheese and
meat salads — sit at room temperature more than two hours.
Thorough cooking destroys "staph" bacteria but staphylococcal
enterotoxin is resistant to heat, refrigeration and freezing.
Clostridium perfringens "Perfringens"
is called the "cafeteria germ" because it may be found in foods
served in quantity and left for long periods of time on inadequately
maintained steam tables or at room temperature. Prevention is
to divide large portions of cooked foods such as beef, turkey,
gravy, dressing, stews and casseroles into smaller portions
for serving and cooling. Keep cooked foods hot or cold, not
lukewarm.
Listeria monocytogenes
Because Listeria bacteria multiply, although slowly,
at refrigeration temperatures, these bacteria can be found in
cold foods typically served on buffets. To avoid serving foods
containing Listeria, follow "keep refrigerated" label
directions and carefully observe "sell by" and "use by" dates
on processed products, and thoroughly reheat frozen or refrigerated
processed meat and poultry products before consumption. |
Last Modified:
March 25, 2008 |
|
|
|
|
|
|