Food safety at Christmas
In addition to the food safety tips below, help prevent food poisoning over the Christmas period by:
- making a food plan for Christmas dinner and the few days after, to make the most of leftovers while ensuring they remain safe to eat
- clear out your fridge / freezer to make room for Christmas food shop, and reduce the risk of food being stored incorrectly
Food safety tips
Follow these food safety tips to help prevent food poisoning:
- when shopping for food, take enough shopping bags to the shop to ensure that cooked and raw food are stored separately
- buy a fridge thermometer to ensure that your fridge is cold enough (0 - 5°C)
- give frozen meat enough time to defrost in a fridge or cool place – allow 10 to 12 hours of defrost time per kg
- check safety information on food labels before preparing it
- wash your hands before and throughout all food preparations
- don't wash raw poultry and other meat
- use different utensils, plates and chopping boards for raw, ready-to-eat and cooked food. If you can't use different utensils, wash them thoroughly between tasks.
- ask the butcher to cut the meat into smaller pieces so that you can put it straight in the oven when you need to
- use a food thermometer to check that meat reaches 75°C in the thickest part
- cook stuffing in a separate roasting tin; stuffing inside the turkey adds cooking time
- put leftovers in fridge within 2 hours, and eat them within 2 days or put them in freezer and only reheat once
- if you're having a buffet, keep chilled foods out of fridge for the shortest time possible, and no longer than 4 hours
- if you've had enough of cooking and fancy a takeaway, make an informed decision about the outlet's food and hygiene safety using the Government of Jersey's Eat Safe food safety scheme