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Keep food poisoning off the menu this holiday season 

Holiday meal with a turkey
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It’s the holiday season, and that means FOOD! Whether you’re hosting a big group or bringing your famous side dish to a gathering, you want to make sure your food is both delicious and safe.  

While anyone can get a foodborne illness, and symptoms like diarrhea and vomiting are never pleasant, foodborne illnesses are most dangerous for children, the elderly, and people with weakened immune systems.  

Top tips for keeping food safe 

Five simple safety precautions can help keep you and your family and friends safe from foodborne illness at home. 

1. Wash your hands.

Use warm water and soap to get rid of germs that can get into food. Wash up:

2. Avoid cross-contaminating food.

Cross-contamination happens when germs from raw or unclean foods get into foods that won’t be fully cooked before eating. Key tips:

3. Don’t leave certain types of food at room temperature – that’s the danger zone!

Some types of food – like meat, poultry, cooked starches, sliced melons, sprouts, fresh herb and garlic-in-oil mixtures, dairy products, cut leafy greens, cut tomatoes, and cooked produce – can grow bacteria quickly and easily at room temperature (between 41 and 135° F). Your job is to get these foods through the danger zone as quickly as possible by cooking, cooling, or reheating. Key tips:

4. Cool food properly when you’re ready to put it in the fridge.

Not cooling food the right way is a major cause of foodborne illness. How to cool food safely: 

5. Heat (and reheat) foods to the right temperature.

Make sure you have a meat thermometer! Key tips:

Get more tips on our webpage: Food safety in your home kitchen.  

Originally posted on November 24, 2025.

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