Week 5: Good dental hygiene promotes overall fitness – Connellsville Daily Courier

Via Scoop.itfood safety

Week 5: Good dental hygiene promotes overall fitnessConnellsville Daily CourierIf you tell yourself you’ll brush your teeth after one plateful of food, you’ll give your digestive system more time to work and you’ll be less likely to go back and eat…
Via www.pittsburghlive.com

70 hospitalised with food poisoning in Chhattisgarh

Via Scoop.itfood safety

Raipur, Feb 21 (IANS) The condition of over 70 poor people, including 32 women and children, in Chhattisgarh is reported to be stable hours after they were hospitalised for food poisoning,…
Via networkedblogs.com

7th Dubai International Food Safety Conference to spotlight foodborne disease surveillance – Zawya

Via Scoop.itfood safety

More than 1,500 regional and international delegates are attending the conference, which this (7th Dubai International Food Safety Conference to spotlight foodborne disease surveillance http://t.co/Mmd3gYHc…)…
Via www.zawya.com

Facts and fiction of food safety

Via Scoop.itfood safety

We all know that you have to cook pork until it’s grey, that you can’t leave any-thing with mayonnaise out for too long, and that a quick whiff tells you if food’s gone bad. Except that each of those “facts” is wrong.
Via www.theprovince.com

New weapon against the use of swill oil — Shanghai Daily | ???? — English Window to China New

Via Scoop.itfood safety

SHANGHAI food safety inspectors are now equipped with a German testing device that can help them discover cooking oil recycled from swill oil.

The Shanghai Food and Drug Administration said its inspectors in Xuhui…
Via www.shanghaidaily.com

Food Standards Agency – Search for food hygiene ratings

Via Scoop.itfood safety

Eating out? Getting food in? Check the food hygiene rating. Find out if a restaurant, takeaway or food shop you want to visit has good food hygiene standards.
Via ratings.food.gov.uk

Honey at front of food safety battle | Management content from Western Farm Press

Via Scoop.itfood safety

Honey is a promising candidate as a natural preservative to prevent food-borne illness and food spoilage. (RT @beegeek: Honey at front of food safety battle.
Via westernfarmpress.com

7 Foods Even Food Safety Experts Won’t Eat

Via Scoop.itfood safety

Guess what some food safety experts won’t even eat according to Liz Vaccariello from prevention magazine. 1.
Via www.ecokaren.com

Don’t forget food safety management procedures – 2/17/2012 – Caterer and Hotelkeeper

Via Scoop.itfood safety

Last month’s record fine for a Chinese restaurant in Greenwich for its inadequate food safety management procedures highlighted the power that local authorities have to close down food businesses.
Via www.caterersearch.com

Picking the Right Grill

Charcoal Grills

Charcoal grills are one of the most used types of grills. Charcoal grills utilize charcoal and lighter fluid to heat up and cook your food. Charcoal grills come in all shapes and sizes, and vary in cost.

Charcoal grills come in small sizes, which are ideal for apartment dwellers or people with small homes. Once you have used your charcoal grill, you can clean it, and store it away.

One of the most noticeable features when using charcoal is the flavor of the food you cook. To cook with a charcoal grill, you must buy charcoal briquettes and lighter fluid. Charcoal is a one use item, and will need to be discarded after each use. Charcoal can be picked up at your local superstore, gas station, or grocery store, and is typically pretty inexpensive. Charcoal must be light and allowed to burn until the charcoal is no longer on fire, but is red embers. The best way to get the pile to burn is by stacking it in a pyramid.

Propane Grills

Propane grills are also useful for someone in small areas, since they can come in smaller sizes.

Gas grills work by a spark igniting the gas within the grill. Gas grills typically have a knob or button in which you push, which in turn activates a small hammer. The hammer hits the top of an ignition crystal. Then the burner mixes the gas with oxygen and spreads it all over the cooking surface.

Propane grills use propane gas to cook your food. If you want to quickly cook foods while still maintaining a grilled flavor, you may want to consider Propane grills.

Gas grills, unlike some of the other grills types, have the ability to come with many different types of cooking surfaces. These different cooking surfaces include a BBQ surface, a flat grill, and a ribbed grill. Some grills even offer these types of surfaces as none stick, which allow you to cook a whole array of foods that you would not be able to cook on a grill otherwise. You will be able to cook your whole meal, including side dishes if you plan correctly. Some gas grills even contain a Wok type surface for cooking pasta and rise dishes, or a full rotisserie set that allows you to cook rotisserie chicken.

Natural Gas Grills

The easiest grill to use is by far the natural gas grill. Natural gas grills are designed to hook directly into your home’s natural gas line, eliminating the need to provide the fuel source. Natural gas grills are also one of the easiest grills to clean since you do not have to worry about cleaning out the charcoal or wood.

Natural gas grills are a little more complicated then smaller grills, so they require more room.

Smoker Grills

Smoker Grills are used when flavor is the number one priority. Smoker grills use wood to slow cook your meat. Flavor can be controlled by using different types of woods.

Some of the common types of wood used is:

Cherry – Similar to apple, but slightly bitter because most Cherry wood comes from chokecherry trees. / Use on Poultry-turns skin dark brown.

Sugar Maple – Smoky, mellow and lightly sweet. / Use on Fish & Beef.

Hickory – The most highly used wood, both commercially and for home use. Has a strong, heavy, bacon Flavor. / Use on Pork, Ham, and Beef.

Mesquite – One of the hottest burning woods. Predominately Honey, earthy flavor with a slightly bitter aftertaste. / Use on Beef, Fish, Poultry.

Oak – A lighter version of mesquite. Red oak is quite Similar to mesquite; white oak is milder. / Use on Beef & Fish.