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They're in a wide range of foods, including meat, milk
and other dairy products, spices, chocolate, seafood, and even water.
Millions of cases of food-borne illness occur each year.
Most cases of food-borne illness can be prevented.
Careless food handling sets the stage for the growth of disease- causing
"bugs." For example, hot or cold foods left standing too long at room
temperature provide an ideal climate for bacteria to grow. Proper cooking or
processing of food destroys bacteria.
Fresh does not always mean safe. The organisms that cause
food poisoning aren't the ones that cause spoilage. Wax often coats certain
kinds of produce, such as apples and cucumbers, and may trap pesticides. To
remove the wax, wash with very diluted dish detergent and a soft scrub
brush, or peel (the best nutrients are often in the peel, however).
Foods may be cross contaminated when cutting boards and
kitchen tools that have been used to prepare a contaminated food, such as
raw chicken, aren't cleaned before being used for another food, such as
vegetables.
How Bacteria Get In Food
Bacteria may be present on products when you buy them.
Plastic-wrapped boneless chicken and ground meat, for example, were once
part of live chicken or cattle. Raw meat, poultry, seafood, and eggs aren't
sterile. Neither is fresh produce such as lettuce, tomatoes, sprouts, and
melons. Foods, including safely cooked, ready-to-eat foods, can become cross
contaminated with bacteria transferred from raw products, meat juices or
other contaminated products, or from food handlers with poor personal
hygiene.
Unpasteurized fruit and vegetable juices and ciders,
foods made with raw or undercooked eggs, chicken, tuna, potato and macaroni
salads, and cream-filled pastries harboring these pathogens have also been
implicated in food-borne illnesses, as has fresh produce.
Poultry is the food most often contaminated with disease-
causing organisms. It's been estimated that 60 percent or more of raw
poultry sold at retail probably carries some disease-causing bacteria.
Bacteria such as Listeria monocytogenes, Vibrio
vulnificus, Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Salmonella have been found in raw
seafood. Oysters, clams, mussels, scallops, and cockles may be contaminated
with hepatitis A virus.
If you have a health problem, especially one that may
have impaired your immune system, don't eat raw shellfish and use only
pasteurized milk and cheese, and pasteurized or concentrated ciders and
juices.
Keep It Clean
The cardinal rule of safe food preparation in the home
is: Keep everything clean.
The cleanliness rule applies to the areas where food is
prepared and, most importantly, to the cook. Wash hands with warm water and
soap for at least 20 seconds before starting to prepare a meal and after
handling raw meat or poultry. Cover long hair with a net or scarf, and be
sure that any open sores or cuts on the hands are completely covered. If the
sore or cut is infected, stay out of the kitchen.
Keep your work area clean and uncluttered. Be sure to
wash the countertops with a solution of 1 teaspoon chlorine bleach to about
1 quart of water or with a commercial kitchen-cleaning agent diluted
according to product directions. They're the most effective at getting rid
of bacteria.
Also, be sure to keep dishcloths and sponges clean
because, when wet, these materials harbor bacteria and may promote their
growth. Wash dishcloths and sponges weekly in the washing machine in hot
water.
While you're at it, sanitize the kitchen sink drain
periodically by pouring down the sink a solution of one teaspoon bleach to
one quart of water or a commercial cleaning agent. Food particles get
trapped in the drain and disposal and, along with moistness, create an ideal
environment for bacterial growth.
Use smooth cutting boards made of hard maple or plastic
and free of cracks and crevices. Avoid boards made of soft, porous
materials. Wash cutting boards with hot water, soap, and a scrub brush.
Then, sanitize them in an automatic dishwasher or by rinsing with a solution
of 1 teaspoon chlorine bleach to about 1 quart of water.
Always wash and sanitize cutting boards after using them
for raw foods, such as seafood or chicken, and before using them for other
foods. Consider using one cutting board only for foods that will be cooked,
such as raw fish, and another only for ready-to-eat foods, such as bread,
fresh fruit, and cooked fish. Visit The Cutting Board Factory for a great
selection of food-safe cutting boards.
Always use clean utensils and wash them between cutting
different foods.
Wash the lids of canned foods before opening to keep dirt
from getting into the food. Also, clean the blade of the can opener after
each use. Food processors and meat grinders should be taken apart and
cleaned as soon as possible after they're used.
Don't put cooked meat on an unwashed plate or platter
that has held raw meat.
Wash fresh fruits and vegetables thoroughly, rinsing in
warm water. Don't use soap or other detergents. If necessary (and
appropriate) use a small scrub brush to remove surface dirt.
Keep your kitchen clean and bacteria-free. Clean kitchen
surfaces with hot soapy water using antibacterial sponges and soaps.
The sponges themselves should be bacteria-free. Microwave
them for about a minute to keep them clean and dry.
Keep benches, cutting boards, knives, pans or other
utensils clean.
Article Source :
www.womenbrands.com
Terry Nicholls
My Home-Based Business Advisor
www.my-home-based-business-advisor.com
Copyright © by Terry Nicholls. All Rights Reserved.
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