While many foods, such as fruits and vegetables, are best in their natural state, others simply are not safe unless they have been processed. For example, always buy pasteurized as opposed to raw milk and, if you have the choice, select fresh or frozen poultry treated with ionizing radiation. When shopping, keep in mind that food processing was invented to improve safety as well as to prolong shelf-life. Certain foods eaten raw, such as lettuce, need thorough washing.
Many raw foods, most notably poultry, meats, and unpasteurized milk, are very often contaminated with disease-causing pathogens. Thorough cooking will kill the pathogens, but remember that the temperature of all parts of the food must reach at least 70C. If cooked chicken is still raw near the bone, put it back in the oven until ils done -- all the way through. Frozen meat, fish, and poultry must be thoroughly thawed before cooking.
When cooked foods cool to room temperature, microbes begin to proliferate. The longer the wait, the greater the risk. To be on the safe side, eat cooked foods just as soon as they come off the heat.
If you must prepare foods in advance or want to keep leftovers, be sure to store them under either hot (near or above 60C) conditions. This rule is of vital importance if you plan to store foods for more than four or five hours. Foods for infants should preferably not be stored at all. A common error, responsible for countless cases of foodborne disease, is putting too large a quantity of warm food in the refrigerator. In an overburdened refrigerator, cooked foods cannot cool to the core as quickly as they must. When the centre of food remains warm (above 10C) too long, microbes thrive, quickly proliferating to disease-producing levels.
This is your best protection against microbes that may have developed during storage (proper storage slows down microbial growth but does not kill the organisms). Once again, thorough reheating means that all parts of the food must reach at least 70C.
Safely cooked food can become contaminated through even the slightest contact with raw food. This cross-examination can be direct, as when raw poultry meat comes into contact with cooked foods. It can also be more subtle. For example, dont prepare a raw chicken and then use the same unwashed cutting board and knife to carve the cooked bird. Doing so can reintroduce all the potential risks for microbial growth and subsequent illness present prior to cooking.
Wash hands thoroughly before you start preparing food and after every interruption -- especially if you have to change the baby or have been to the toilet. After preparing raw foods such as fish, meat or poultry, wash again before you start handling other foods. And if you have an infection on your hand, be sure to bandage or cover it before preparing food. Remember too, that household pets -- dogs, birds, and especially turtles -- often harbour dangerous pathogens that can pass from your hands into food.
Since foods are so easily contaminated, any surface used for food preparation must be kept absolutely clean. Think of every food scrap, crumb or spot as a potential reservoir of germs. Cloths that come into contact with dishes and utensils should be changed every day and boiled before reuse. Separate cloths for cleaning the floor also require, frequent washing.
Animals frequently carry pathogenic microorganisms which cause foodborne disease. Storing foods in tightly sealed containers is your best protection.
Pure water is just as important for food preparation as for drinking. If you have any doubts about the water supply, boil water before adding it to food or making ice for drinks. Be especially careful with any water used to prepare an infants meal.