- Safe Minimum Internal Temperature Chart | Food Safety and Inspection . . .
Product Minimum Internal Temperature and Rest Time; Beef, Pork, Veal and Lamb Steaks, Chops and Roasts: 145 degrees F (62 8 degrees C) and allow to rest for at least 3 minutes
- Chicken from Farm to Table - Food Safety and Inspection Service
Boneless chicken breasts, bone-in parts, and whole chickens may take 1 to 2 days or longer to thaw Once the raw chicken thaws, it can be kept in the refrigerator an additional day or two before cooking During this time, if chicken thawed in the refrigerator is not used, it can safely be refrozen without cooking it first
- Is it done yet? You cant tell just by looking! - Food Safety and . . .
Is it done yet? You can’t tell just by looking! Use a food thermometer to check for the safe minimum internal temperature Fish Red Meat Ground Meat Egg Dishes Poultry Beef, Pork, Veal Lamb Beef, Pork, Veal Lamb Turkey, Chicken Duck (Steaks, Roasts Chops) (Ground) (Whole, Pieces Ground) 145°F 145°F 160°F 160°F 165°F
- Food Thermometers - Food Safety and Inspection Service
Egg dishes should be checked in several places To be sure these dishes are done, check to see that a thermometer at the center of the dish shows 160 degrees F Also, use a thermometer to help guard against uneven cooking due to hot spots and inadequate cooking due to varying oven temperatures
- Doneness Versus Safety - Food Safety and Inspection Service
Webster's dictionary defines "doneness" as the condition of being cooked to the desired degree While food safety experts stress the internal temperature that ensures destruction of pathogens in food, "doneness" reflects subjective qualities such as the appearance, texture, and optimum flavor of a food
- Poultry Processing: Questions Answers - Food Safety and Inspection . . .
Aggregate Salmonella Categorization of Raw Chicken Parts, NRTE Comminuted Poultry, Young Chicken Carcass and Young Turkey Carcass Establishments Using Moving Windows; Salmonella Initiative Program Criteria Quarterly Sampling Reports on Antimicrobial Resistance; Quarterly Sampling Reports on Raw Beef Products
- FSIS Cooking Guideline for Meat and Poultry Products (Revised Appendix A)
FSIS Cooking Guideline for Meat and Poultry Products (Revised Appendix A)
- Stuffing and Food Safety - Food Safety and Inspection Service
For small cuts of meat or poultry, such as a boneless chicken breast, pork chop, lamb breast, crown pork roast, or roulade of beef, allow about 1 2 cup of prepared stuffing per serving When stuffing whole poultry, allow about 1 2 to 1 cup of prepared stuffing per pound of raw poultry
|