Be Food Safe With Picnics and Cookouts

By DeCA Home Economist Kay Blakley

       Knowing how to prepare, handle and store food properly is important all year long, but higher summer temperatures kick spoilage actions into high gear. Under normal circumstances, for example, the rule of thumb for safely allowing foods to remain at room temperature while the meal is being served and consumed is two hours. At temperatures above 90° F it's only one hour. That's why it's so important to know the summer food safety rules and apply them properly.

Keep it Clean: Wash hands with soap and water often while you're handling food, and do the same for any surfaces the food comes into contact with. On a picnic, use paper towels and hand sanitizer or a spray bottle filled with soapy water. Give fresh fruits and vegetables a bath too -- just before your ready to use them, but don't use soap. Just rinse them good under cold running water, scrubbing briskly with your hands or a soft brush, then dry well with paper towels.

Separate so you don't Contaminate: This caution starts in the cart at the commissary and carries through to refrigerator storage, to packing a cooler, to cooking and serving. Always keep raw meat, poultry and seafood, away from already cooked, ready–to-eat foods, and fresh produce. Never put these foods, after they've been cooked, back on the same plate that held them raw. Always use a clean plate. If raw meats, poultry, or seafood must share space in the same cooler as other foods, carefully pack them in sealed, leak-proof containers.

Chill Perishable Foods Promptly and Thaw Foods Properly: Nothing will give you a faster start toward growing some nasty, illness-causing germs than thawing foods on the kitchen counter at room temperature. Don't do it! Thaw foods in the refrigerator, allowing 24 hours for each five pounds of frozen food to be thawed. For quick thawing, submerge foods wrapped in airtight packaging in cold water, changing the water every 30 minutes. Thaw foods in the microwave, only if you'll be cooking them immediately.

Thoroughly chill foods destined for a picnic, in the refrigerator before packing them in the cooler, and leave them there until serving time. Keep track of the amount of time they have been exposed to warm weather. At temperatures below 90 degrees they should be safe for two hours, but consume within one hour in weather above 90 degrees. Nearly all perishable foods should be discarded after a picnic.

Cook it Safe – Test the Temperature: If you're not in the habit of using a meat thermometer to verify that everyday items like hamburgers, pork chops, or chicken breasts have reached a safe internal temperature, please, do yourself and your family a favor by changing that bad habit. Even though the accepted advice used to be "cook ground beef patties until the center is no longer pink," judging when the food is done based on color alone has been proven to be unreliable. As a matter of fact, a USDA study found that 1 out of every 4 hamburgers turns brown in the center BEFORE it reaches a safe internal temperature. So, break out that meat thermometer, and make temperature taking a regular habit.

To learn more visit the Food Safety page, and follow the links to "Four Easy Lessons in Safe Food Handling." Next time you're in the mood for outdoor grilling or picnics and potlucks in the park be sure to apply all you've learned, and use some of the picnic safe recipes featured here.

Below are links to featured recipes.


Two top benefits partner ‘for life’


By Bonnie Powell, DECA

 Fat. It’s an epidemic among Americans and military families are no exception. Now, the Defense Commissary Agency is partnering with TRICARE in an effort to create greater awareness of nutrition and healthier eating through participation in TRICARE’s “Healthy Choices for Life” campaign. As the health care provider of the military, TRICARE’s overall campaign also addresses problems associated with alcohol and tobacco use.

“A focus on nutrition is one of the major trends in the grocery industry now and we want to lead the way in making commissaries the place to shop for fresh, healthy foods,” said Patrick B. Nixon, acting director and chief executive officer for DeCA. “In addition to great produce sections, we have organic and healthy food and wellness sections in many commissaries. These types of products will be increasing rapidly as more manufacturers get involved in the trend away from fad diets and more toward healthier eating.

“Our commissaries worldwide will also partner with health and wellness and nutrition professionals on installations to sponsor commissary tours that actually ‘show and tell’ military families what to look for on labels and the kinds of foods they should be eating for better health,” said Nixon. “We’re not trying to tell customers what they should or shouldn’t buy when they shop their commissary, but we are saying ‘it’s your choice, make it healthy’ and we’re doing what we can to increase awareness.”

DeCA’s Web site at www.commissaries.com will be linked to the TRICARE “Healthy Choices for Life” Web page. Beginning with National Nutrition Month® in March and extending through the remainder of the year, commissary customers will begin to see a series of related posters, special cards in the produce department, healthy food fairs, handouts, shelf signs with nutritional information, increased “healthy food” sections and displays from manufacturers.

Single service member tours during Commissary Awareness Month in May will have a “make it healthy” theme. Customers will even have the opportunity to participate in “commissary calisthenics” during Fitness Month in May.

 “Just walking every single aisle of the commissary has some value,” said Nixon. “But we might see some fun exercises like calf stretches while holding your cart in the queue line – or try some ‘canned bean curls.’ But please put the cans back when you’re finished, or better yet, put them in your cart!” Coincidently, the new 2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans from the Department of Agriculture stress eating well-balanced meals and exercising daily for good health and weight management.

“Just remember though, exercise and fresh foods aren’t the only things you can get at the commissary,” Nixon said. “Military families will find ‘financial fitness’ by using their commissary benefit to purchase groceries at cost. It all adds up to overall average savings of 30 percent or more over commercial grocery stores.”

The Defense Commissary Agency operates a worldwide chain of nearly 275 commissaries providing groceries to military personnel, retirees and their families in a safe and secure shopping environment. Authorized patrons purchase items at cost plus a 5-percent surcharge, which covers the costs of building new commissaries and modernizing existing ones. Shoppers save an average of 30 percent or more on their purchases compared to commercial prices – savings worth more than $2,700 annually for a family of four. A core military family support element, and a valued part of military pay and benefits, commissaries contribute to family readiness, enhance the quality of life for America’s military and their families, and help recruit and retain the best and brightest men and women to serve their country.


Dance the “Four Step” to Food Safety

By Kay Blakley, DeCA Europe Consumer Advocate 

It’s a great time to learn and follow the four steps to food safety: Clean, separate, cook and chill to protect foods from harmful bacteria, which can ultimately result in food borne illness. Military food safety inspectors help to make sure foods offered for sale by your commissary are handled and stored according to strict food safety guidelines. The commissary shopper’s role is to apply these same good practices at home, by following these helpful tips.

Clean: If you only have time to keep one room in your house clean, make it your kitchen! Clean all the food storage and preparation areas of your kitchen, including the refrigerator, on a routine basis. Hot soapy water is adequate in most cases, because it removes dirt and most of the germs. In certain circumstances, such as when raw meat, poultry or fish has come in direct contact with preparation surfaces, disinfecting the area will provide an extra margin of safety. Use a weak bleach solution (one teaspoon household bleach to one quart water) or a commercial disinfectant to clean the entire area. Use paper towels that can be thrown away, if possible, but if cloth towels are used, remove the dirty ones from the kitchen as soon as the disinfectant job is complete.

Keep in mind that you can easily contaminate your whole kitchen by unwittingly carrying harmful germs on your hands and transferring them to every object you touch. Wash your hands often including before, during and after food preparation; before you eat, and after you use the bathroom; after handling animals or animal waste; after changing the baby or covering your nose or mouth for a cough or sneeze.

Separate:  Cross-contamination is the transfer of harmful bacteria from one food to other foods, cutting boards and utensils. When handling raw meat, poultry and seafood, it is especially important to keep these foods and their juices away from already cooked or ready-to-eat foods and fresh produce. When shopping, keep these foods separated in your grocery cart or place them in a plastic bag to prevent their juices from dripping onto other foods. At home, if these foods are stored in the refrigerator or are frozen and then thawed in the refrigerator, use precautions to prevent their juices from dripping onto other foods.

Always wash your hands after handling raw meat, poultry and seafood products. Use warm water and soap and dry hands on a paper towel you can throw away immediately for the greatest protection against cross contamination. Wash cutting boards, dishes and counter tops that have come in contact with these raw foods before preparing any other foods using these same surfaces or utensils. If possible, use one cutting board for fresh produce and a separate one for raw meat, poultry and seafood. Once a cutting board becomes excessively worn or develops deep hard-to-clean grooves, it’s time to replace it.

If your recipe calls for marinating the meat, poultry or seafood, always do so in the refrigerator, not on the countertop; and discard any leftover marinating solution. Finally, never place cooked food back on the same plate or cutting board that previously held raw meat, seafood or poultry – always use a clean plate.

Cook: Meat and poultry require various degrees of “doneness” to render harmless any harmful bacteria present. A food thermometer is the only way to be totally sure the appropriate internal temperature has been reached. If you’re not accustomed to using a meat thermometer, give one a try. You’ll find that not only are your meat and poultry dishes safer, they are likely to be more tender and juicy as well because with a thermometer you’re less likely to overcook.

  • Whole poultry should reach 180 F and breast meat 170 F. Juices should run clear and meat should be white in the center.

  • Ground beef should reach 160 F. The center of a ground beef patty should be gray and its juices clear. Cook ground poultry to 165 F.

  • Beef, veal and lamb steaks, roasts and chops should be cooked to 145 F.

  • All cuts of fresh pork should reach 160 F.

  • Cook fish until it is opaque or white and flaky.

Chill: When shopping in the commissary, your chilled and frozen selections should go into the shopping cart last – right before you head to the check-out lane. These same products are the first ones you should put away once you’ve reached home. Consider using cold packs or a cooler if the commissary is a great distance from home. Bacteria grow most rapidly in the “danger zone” – temperatures between 40 F and 140 F. Keeping foods out of this temperature range is critical to food safety. Make sure your refrigerator is 40 F (or a little cooler) and your freezer compartment is 0 F. Cold temperatures significantly slow the growth of harmful bacteria so be sure to refrigerate perishable foods promptly.

Follow the Top 4 “cool rules”:

  1. The chill factor: Refrigerate or freeze perishables and prepared foods as soon as possible after purchase. If you’ve planned to take care of several errands while on base or post, do your commissary shopping last and head straight home with your perishables without delay. Refrigerate leftovers within two hours of preparation, or within one hour if the temperature is above 90 F. Marinate foods in the refrigerator – never on the countertop at room temperature.

  2. The thaw law: Never defrost food at room temperature. Thaw food in the refrigerator, allowing 24 hours for each five pounds of frozen meat to be thawed. For quick thawing, submerge foods wrapped in airtight packaging in cold water, changing the water every 30 minutes. Thaw foods in the microwave only if you’ll be cooking them immediately.

  3. Divide and conquer: Separate large amounts of leftovers into small, shallow containers for quicker cooling in the refrigerator.

  4. Avoid the pack attack: Don’t over-stuff the refrigerator. Cold air must circulate to keep food safe.

     The Defense Commissary Agency operates nearly 280 commissaries worldwide, providing groceries to military personnel, retirees and their families. Commissary patrons purchase items at cost plus a 5-percent surcharge, which covers the construction of new commissaries and the modernization of existing stores. Patrons save an average of 30 percent or more on their purchases compared to commercial prices. These savings are worth more than $2,400 a year for a family of four. A core military family support element, and a valued part of military pay and benefits, commissaries contribute to family readiness, enhance the quality of life for America’s military and their families, and help recruit and retain the best and brightest men and women to serve their country.


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