A Consumer Guide to Safe Handling

and

Preparation of Ground Meat and Ground Poultry

COOL IT!  

Ground Meat and ground poultry are more perishable than most foods. In the danger zone between 40º F and 140º F, bacteria can multiply rapidly. Since you can't see, smell or taste bacteria, keep the products cold to keep them safe.

Safe Handling

Choose ground meat packages that are cold and tightly wrapped. The meat surface exposed to air will be red; interior of fresh meat will be dark. 

Put refrigerated and frozen foods in you grocery cart last and make the grocery store your last stop before home. 

Pack perishables in an ice chest if it will take you more than an hour to get home. 

Place ground meat and ground poultry in the refrigerator or freezer immediately. 

Defrost frozen ground meats in the refrigerator - never at room temperature. If microwave defrosting, cook immediately. 

Safe Storage

Set your refrigerator at 40º F or colder and your freezer at 0º F or colder. 

Keep uncooked ground meat and ground poultry in the refrigerator, cook or freeze within 1 to 2 days. 

Use or freeze cooked meat and poultry stored in the refrigerator within 3 to 4 days. 

For best quality, store frozen raw ground meats no longer than 3 to 4 months; cooked meats, 2 to 3 months. 

CLEAN IT!

Keep everything clean--hands, utensils, counters, cutting boards and sinks. That way, your food will stay as safe as possible.

Always wash hands thoroughly in hot soapy water before preparing foods and after handling raw meat. 

Don't let raw meat or poultry juices touch ready-to-eat foods either in the refrigerator or during preparation. 

Don't put cooked foods on the same plate that held raw or poultry. 

Wash utensils that have touched raw meat with hot, soapy water before using them for cooked meats.  

Wash counters, cutting boards and other surfaces raw meats have touched. And don't forget to keep the inside of your refrigerator clean. 

COOK IT!

Cooking kills harmful bacteria. Be sure ground meat and ground poultry are cooked thoroughly.

Cook it safely

The center of patties and meat loaf should not be pink and the juices should run clear. 

Crumbled ground meats should be cooked until no pink color remains. 

Ground meat patties and loaves are safe when they reach 160ºF in the center; ground poultry patties and loaves, 165ºF. 

Cook it evenly

During broiling, grilling, or cooking on the stove, turn meats over at least once. 

When baking, set oven no lower than 325º F. 

If microwaving, cover meats. Midway through cooking, turn patties over and rotate the dish, rotate a meat loaf; and stir ground meats once or twice. Let microwaved meats stand to complete cooking process. 

After cooking, refrigerate leftovers immediately. Separate into small portions for fast cooling. 

To reheat all leftovers, cover and heat to 165º F or until hot and steaming throughout. 

Consumer Guidelines

Cold storage times for Ground Meat and Ground Poultry;

Refrigerator (40ºF or below):

                    Product                                        Days

       Uncooked ground meat and

       ground poultry (bulk or patties)             1 to 2 days

       Cooked ground meat and

       ground poultry (hamburgers,

       meat loaf and dishes

       containing ground meats)                       3 to 4 days

       Freezer (0º F or below):

                    Product                                          Months

         Uncooked ground meat and

       ground poultry (bulk or patties)                3 to 4 months

         Cooked ground meat and

       ground poultry (hamburgers,

       meat loaf and dishes

       containing ground meats)                          2 to 3 months  

Internal Temperatures for safe cooking:

          Product                                   Temperature

         Uncooked ground meat                      160º F

       Uncooked ground poultry                  165º F

      All cooked leftovers, reheated           165º F

Bacteria are part of our environment. Where there is food there may be bacteria. Proper food handling and cooking is the best way to prevent foodborne illness. Generally most at risk for developing foodborne illness are children, the elderly and those who have chronic illnesses or compromised immune systems.

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For more information about the safe handling and preparation of ground meat and ground poultry, call your local health department at (404)657-6524, or you can call the USDA's Meat and Poultry Hotline toll-free at: 1-800-535-4555 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday through Friday or contact your local Cooperative Extension Service Office.

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Developed by Food Marketing Institute and American Meat Institute

In cooperation with National Live Stock & Meat Board, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service Extension Service, and Food and Drug Administration  

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