Bbq Articles Item ID: #168Bbq Article: How To Ensure Barbecue Food Safety
NOW
$0
Bbq Articles
Tags: Abdominal Cramps, article, Bacterium, Barbecue, Barbecue Food, Cookout, Dehydration, Diarrhoea, E Coli, Ensure, Food, Food Borne Illness, Food Hygiene, Food Poisoning, Food Safety, Ground Meat, Hamburgers, Important Point, Internal Temperature, Rare Steak, Safety, Surface Bacteria, Upset Stomach, Usda Research, Work Colleagues Product Information:Big Boy Barbecue Book – Cover Image by Umpqua How To Ensure Barbecue Food Safety Item DescriptionBig Boy Barbecue Book – Cover How To Ensure Barbecue Food Safety Many friends and work colleagues have phoned in sick because of food poisoning and followed it up with something like “I had a BBQ at the weekend, and I must have eaten something not properly cooked”. To be honest I think some of them probably just drank too much but clearly there’s enough of a belief out there that food hygiene is a problem at a barbeque for either a genuine day off work or a cast iron excuse. In many of the barbecue articles that I’ve written I’ve concentrated on the phrase “sizzle is hot, flames are not” which focuses on the need to be patient and control the barbecue flames. If however you still haven’t mastered this point then maybe it’s time to resign yourself to buying a barbecue thermometer? Why do I need a BBQ thermometer? Take this barbecue hamburger example: Many folks assume that when barbecued hamburger is brown in the middle, it is well done but according to USDA research, 1 out of every 4 hamburgers turns brown before it reaches a safe internal temperature. The internal temperature must be 160°F before its safe to eat. The bug we’re trying to protect ourselves against is e-coli, and bacterium that live on the surface of meat. This is an important point and essential to understand because we can happily eat a rare steak without any chance of food poisoning. Provided the steak is cooked well on the outside, the bacteria are killed. This is not the case with a hamburger however because the burger is made from ground meat so surface bacteria could be anywhere inside the hamburger. The signs and symptoms of food borne illness range from upset stomach, diarrhoea, fever, vomiting, abdominal cramps, and dehydration, to more severe illness-even death, but having said all this, please don’t be put off having some hamburgers at your next BBQ cookout. With a few simple precautions that follow the rules of basic food hygiene and barbecue food poisoning will be a thing of the past. Use a food thermometer. Instant-read food thermometers are good for checking the internal temperature toward the end of the cooking time. 1. The food thermometer should be placed in the thickest part of the food and should not be touching bone, fat, or gristle. 2. Make sure to clean your food thermometer with hot, soapy water before and after each use! The other option is to use a large-dial oven-safe or oven-probe thermometer and these can be inserted in the meat and used for the duration of cooking. There are many types of food thermometers, so it is important to follow the instructions for your food thermometer to ensure the correct reading. When happy with the method of use you can refer to the USDA Recommended Safe Minimum Internal Temperatures to ensure a safe barbeque cookout.
· Steaks & Roasts – 145 °F That’s the main one, but to finish off here are a few more tips to help you avoid food poisoning at your next BBQ:- 1. Wash hands and surfaces often Use warm, soapy water for 20 seconds before and after handling food and wash you’re cutting boards after each food item is prepared 2. Don’t cross-contaminate, always keep raw and cooked food separate. Never place cooked food on a plate which previously held raw meat, poultry, or seafood. 3. Refrigerate promptly – but do not cover (e.g. with stretch wrap) if the food is still hot Refrigerate or freeze perishables, prepared foods, and leftovers within 2 hours or sooner. Be Food Safe! Prepare With Care Know how to prepare, handle, and store food safely to keep you and your family safe. Bacteria can grow on meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, and dairy products, as well as cut-up or cooked vegetables and fruits. Follow the above and food poisoning should be a thing of the past. Why not pass this onto your employees? You may see a marked improvement in Monday morning attendance – or maybe just a different excuse. Free Barbecue Recipes – Free BBQ grill recipes & meat smoker cooking ideas on the ceramic barbecue. Barbecue Grill Guide – Compare electric, gas and charcoal barbecue grills. Easy Barbecue Recipes – Easy recipes for the smoker grill with lots of tips. Best Bbq / Grilling Program Converts 1-22.5 Hops w/ Cheap Traffic Planet Barbecue!: 309 Recipes, 60 CountriesThe most ambitious book yet by America’s bestselling, award-winning grill expert whose Barbecue! Bible books have over 4 million copies in print. Setting out—again—on the barbecue trail four years ago, Steven Raichlen visited 60 countries—yes, 60 countries—and collected 309 of the tastiest, most tantalizing, easy-to-make, and guaranteed-to-wow recipes from every corner of the globe. Welcome to Planet Barbecue, the book that will take America’s passionate, obsessive, smoke-cra
Rating: List Price: $ 22.95 Price: $ 10.55 Related posts: Item ReviewsLeave a Reply |
Serious Barbecue: Smoke, Char, Baste, and Brush Your Way to Great Outdoor Cooking
WAS
The Thrill of the Grill: Techniques, Recipes, & Down-Home Barbecue
WAS
Serious Barbecue: Smoke, Char, Baste, and Brush Your Way to Great Outdoor Cooking
WAS
Weber 10020 Smokey Joe Silver Charcoal Grill, Black
WAS
Barbecue Nation: 350 Hot-Off-The-Grill, Tried-And-True Recipes from America's Backyard
WAS
Holy Smoke: The Big Book of North Carolina Barbecue
WAS
Planet Barbecue!: 309 Recipes, 60 Countries
WAS
Weber 121020 Go-Anywhere Charcoal Grill
WAS |