
Raw foods may contain harmful bacteria. Dr. Diane Roberts of Britain cautions people who work in kitchens to be very careful about handling raw foods with disease-causing bacteria like raw meat, poultry, eggs, milk, and dairy products; raw vegetables, cereals, dried foods, herbs, and spies; uncooked, fermented, or lightly cooked fish and other sea-foods like prawns, crabs, and other shell-fish; and home-processed meats and vegetables.
To keep food safe:
- Store raw and cooked foods separately.
- Do not keep perishable foods in the danger zone (between 10 degrees celsius and 60 degrees celsius) .
- Thaw frozen meat thoroughly; do not part-cook or under cook.
- Serve cooked food immediately, or cool it rapidly within and half hours. Keep it hot until required. Reheat food thoroughly.
- Clean all surfaces, utensils, and the hands thoroughly after preparing raw foods.
- If you are not sure how clean your water supply is, boil all water used for preparing food or for cleaning equipment and utensils.
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