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Fight Bac! Fight Foodborne Bacteria, Four Simple Steps to Food Safety

Fight BAC!® This informative, brochure details how to properly clean your hands and surfaces, cook food to proper temperatures, and maintain proper refrigeration techniques.
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Updated:
July 25, 2023

BAC (foodborne bacteria) could make you and those you care about sick. In fact, even though you can't see BAC—or smell them, or feel them—they and millions more like them may have already invaded the food you eat. But you have the power to Fight BAC!®.

Foodborne illness can strike anyone. Some people are at a higher risk for developing foodborne illness, including pregnant women, young children, older adults, and people with weakened immune systems. For these people, the following four simple steps are critically important:

Clean: Wash hands and surfaces often

Bacteria can be spread throughout the kitchen and get onto hands, cutting boards, utensils, countertops, and food. To Fight BAC!®, always:

  • Wash your hands with warm water and soap for at least 20 seconds before and after handling food and after using the bathroom, changing diapers, and handling pets.
  • Wash your cutting boards, dishes, utensils, and countertops with hot, soapy water after preparing each food item and before you go on to the next food.
  • Consider using paper towels to clean up kitchen surfaces. If you use cloth towels, wash them often in the hot cycle of your washing machine.
  • Rinse fresh fruits and vegetables under running tap water, including those with skins and rinds that are not eaten.
  • Rub firm-skin fruits and vegetables under running tap water or scrub with a clean vegetable brush while rinsing with running tap water.

Separate: Don't cross-contaminate

Cross-contamination is how bacteria can be spread. When handling raw meat, poultry, seafood, and eggs, keep these foods and their juices away from ready-to-eat foods. Always start with a clean scene—wash hands with warm water and soap. Wash cutting boards, dishes, countertops, and utensils with hot, soapy water.

  • Separate raw meat, poultry, seafood, and eggs from other foods in your grocery shopping cart, grocery bags, and in your refrigerator.
  • Use one cutting board for fresh produce and a separate one for raw meat, poultry, and seafood.
  • Never place cooked food on a plate that previously held raw meat, poultry, seafood, or eggs.

Cook: Cook to proper temperatures

Food is safely cooked when it reaches a high enough internal temperature to kill the harmful bacteria that cause illness. Refer to the chart on the back of this brochure for the proper internal temperatures.

  • Use a food thermometer to measure the internal temperature of cooked foods. Make sure that meat, poultry, egg dishes, casseroles, and other foods are cooked to the internal temperature shown in the chart on the back of this brochure.
  • Cook ground meat or ground poultry until it reaches a safe internal temperature. Color is not a reliable indicator of doneness.
  • Cook eggs until the yolk and white are firm. Only use recipes in which eggs are cooked or heated thoroughly.
  • When cooking in a microwave oven, cover food, stir, and rotate for even cooking. Food is done when it reaches the internal temperature shown on the back of this brochure.
  • Bring sauces, soups, and gravy to a boil when reheating.

Chill: Refrigerate promptly

Refrigerate foods quickly because cold temperatures slow the growth of harmful bacteria. Do not over-stuff the refrigerator. Cold air must circulate to help keep food safe. Keeping a constant refrigerator temperature of 40ºF/4°C or below is one of the most effective ways to reduce the risk of foodborne illness. Use an appliance thermometer to be sure the temperature is consistently 40ºF/4°C or below. The freezer temperature should be 0ºF/-18°C or below.

  • Refrigerate or freeze meat, poultry, eggs, and other perishables as soon as you get them home from the store.
  • Never let raw meat, poultry, eggs, cooked food, or cut fresh fruits or vegetables sit at room temperature more than two hours before putting them in the refrigerator or freezer (one hour when the temperature is above 90ºF/32°C).
  • Never defrost food at room temperature. Food must be kept at a safe temperature during thawing. There are three safe ways to defrost food: in the refrigerator, in cold water, and in the microwave. Food thawed in cold water or in the microwave should be cooked immediately.
  • Always marinate food in the refrigerator.
  • Divide large amounts of leftovers into shallow containers for quicker cooling in the refrigerator.
  • Use or discard refrigerated food on a regular basis. Check USDA cold storage information at www.fightbac.org for optimum storage times.

Be a BAC Fighter

Make the meals and snacks from your kitchen as safe as possible.

  • Clean: wash hands and surfaces often
  • Separate: don't cross-contaminate
  • Cook: to proper temperatures, and
  • Chill: refrigerate promptly.

Be a BAC Fighter and Fight BAC!®

Apply the heat... and Fight BAC!®

Cooking food to the proper temperature kills harmful bacteria. So Fight BAC!® by thoroughly cooking your food as follows:

Safe Minimal Internal Temperatures

As measured with a food thermometer

Beef, pork, veal, and lamb (roast, steaks, and chops)  145°F (63°C) with a 3-minute "rest time" after removal from the heat source
Ground meats 160°F (71°C)
Poultry (whole, parts or ground) 165°F (74°C)
Eggs and egg dishes 160°F (71°C) Cook eggs until/both the yolk and the white are firm. Scrambled eggs should not be runny.
Leftovers and casseroles 165°F (74°C)
Fin fish 145°F (63°C)
Guidelines for seafood
Shrimp, lobster, crabs 145°F (63°C) or Flesh pearly and opaque
Clams, oysters, and mussels Shells open during cooking
Scallops 145°F (63°C) or Milky white and firm

Download the brochure using the "Download PDF" link at the top of the page.

Brochure developed by Partnership for Food Safety Education.

Temperature chart developed by USDA-FSIS.

For more information about safe food handling and preparation, visit the Penn State Extension Food Safety and Quality web page.

Also available is the USDA Food Keeper App

Adapted for Penn State Extension by Catherine Cutter, associate professor and food safety extension specialist.