Outdoor activities like hiking, camping, and boating are great ways to boost your mood, take in some fresh air and get a little exercise along the way. In many cases, these activities last all day and involve preparing at least one meal. If the food is not handled correctly, foodborne illness can be an unwelcome souvenir
General Rules for Outdoor Food Safety
Plan ahead:
decide what you are going to eat and how you will prepare it; then plan what
equipment you will need.
- Pack safely: use a cooler, or pack
foods in the frozen state with a cold source.
- Whether in the wild or on the high
seas, protect yourself and your family by washing your hands with soap and
water or bring hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol before
and after handling food.
- Raw meats may contain bacteria, so
keep raw foods separate from other foods.
- Don’t bring perishable meat or poultry
products without a cold source to keep them safe.
- Bring disposable wipes, hand sanitizer
or biodegradable soap for hand- and dishwashing.
- If using a cooler, leftover food is
safe only if the cooler still has ice in it. Otherwise, discard leftover
food.
Food Safety While Hiking & Camping
As you
venture out to enjoy the sights and sounds of nature, it’s important to plan
your snacks and meals based on whether you’ll be out for a few hours or several
days. One meal and some snacks are all you’ll likely need for a short hike but
planning meals for a longer hike or camping trip requires more thought.
Backpack weight is often top-of-mind for hikers and campers, who will be
choosing foods and supplies that are light enough to carry over long distances.
But even expert outdoors enthusiasts may forget about food safety as they plan
their adventure.
Hot or Cold?
The first
principle is to keep foods either hot or cold. Because it is difficult to keep
foods hot without a heat source (although some insulated casserole dishes will
keep things hot for an hour or so), it is best to transport chilled foods.
Refrigerate or freeze the food overnight before you depart. For a cold source,
bring frozen gel-packs or freeze some boxed drinks. The drinks will thaw as you
hike and keep your meal cold at the same time. Trying to decide what to bring?
For a day hike, just about anything will do if you can fit it in your backpack
and keep it cold — sandwiches, fried chicken, bread and cheese, and even salads
— or choose non-perishable foods. Most bacteria grow rapidly between 40 °F
and 140 °F. This temperature range is known as the "Danger Zone." Bacteria can reach
dangerous levels after 2 hours (1 hour if 90 °F or above). Your goal is to keep
food out of that danger zone.
If you are
"car camping" (driving to your site), you have a few more options.
First, you will have the luxury of bringing a cooler. There are many options
available. Foam chests are lightweight, low cost, and have good "cold
retention" power. However, they are fragile and may not last through
numerous outings. Plastic, fiberglass, or steel coolers are more durable and
can take a lot of outdoor wear. They also have excellent "cold
retention" power, but once filled, larger models may weigh 30 or 40
pounds.
To keep
foods cold, you'll need a cold source. A block of ice keeps food colder for
longer than ice cubes. Before leaving home, freeze clean, empty milk cartons
filled with water to make blocks of ice, or use frozen gel-packs. Fill the
cooler with cold or frozen foods. Pack foods in reverse order. First foods
packed should be the last foods used. Ideally, pack your raw meat or poultry in
a separate cooler. If you only have one cooler, then be sure to pack your raw
meat or poultry below ready-to-eat foods. Take foods in the smallest quantity
needed (e.g., a small jar of mayonnaise). At the campsite, insulate the cooler
with a blanket, tarp, poncho or keep it in a shaded area. When the camping trip
is over, discard all perishable foods if there is no longer ice in the cooler
or if the gel-pack is no longer frozen.
"Keep
Everything Clean"
The second
principle is to keep everything clean. Bacteria present on raw meat and poultry
products can be easily spread to other foods by juices dripping from packages,
hands, or utensils. This is called cross-contamination. When transporting raw
meat or poultry, double wrap or place the packages in plastic bags to prevent
juices from the raw product from dripping on other foods. Always wash your
hands before and after handling food, and don't use the same platter and
utensils for raw and cooked meat and poultry. Soap and water are essential to
cleanliness, so if you are going somewhere that will not have running water,
bring it with you or bring hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol.
You can also use disposable, alcohol-based wipes to sanitize your hands.
Safe Potable Water
It is not a
good idea to depend on fresh water from a lake or stream for drinking, meal
preparation or cleaning, no matter how clean it appears. Bring bottled or tap
water for consumption and to help in cleaning. Always start out with a full
water bottle and replenish your supply from tested public systems when
possible.
What Foods to
Bring?
If you are
backpacking for more than a day, the food safety situation gets a little more
complicated. You can still bring cold foods for the first day, but you'll have
to pack shelf-stable items for the next day. Canned goods are safe, but heavy,
so plan your menu carefully. Advances in food technology have produced
relatively lightweight staples that don't need refrigeration or careful
packaging. For example:
·
pre-packaged,
shelf-stable meals
·
peanut butter in
plastic jars;
·
concentrated
juice boxes;
·
canned tuna, ham,
chicken, and beef;
·
dried noodles and
soups;
·
beef jerky and other
shelf-stable meats;
·
dehydrated foods;
·
whole or dried
fruits;
·
nuts;
·
powdered milk
and fruit drinks.
Powdered
mixes for biscuits or pancakes are easy to carry and prepare, as is dried
pasta. There are plenty of powdered sauce mixes that can be used over pasta but
check the required ingredient list. Carry items like dried pasta, rice, and
baking mixes in plastic bags and take only the amount you'll need.
Cooking at the
Campsite
After you
have decided on a menu, consider how you will prepare the food. You'll want to
take as few pots as possible (they're heavy!). Camping supply stores sell
lightweight cooking gear that nest together, but you can also use aluminum foil
wrap and pans for cooking.
You'll need
to decide in advance how you will cook. Will you bring along a portable stove,
or will you build a campfire? Many camping areas prohibit campfires, so check
first to ensure the food you bring can be properly prepared and will be safe to
eat.
Use a Food
Thermometer
Another
important piece of camping equipment is a food thermometer. If you are cooking
meat or poultry on a portable stove or over a fire, you'll need a way to
determine when it is done and safe to eat. Color is not a reliable indicator of
doneness, and it can be especially tricky to tell the color of a food if you
are cooking in a wooded area in the evening.
When
cooking, use a food thermometer to measure the temperature. Digital
thermometers register the temperature in the very tip of the probe, so the
safety of thin foods — such as hamburger patties and boneless chicken breasts —
as well as thicker foods can be determined. A dial thermometer determines the
temperature of a food by averaging the temperature along the stem and,
therefore, should be inserted 2 to 2 ½ inches into the food. If the food is
thin, the probe must be inserted sideways into the food.
It is
critical to use a food thermometer when cooking hamburgers. Ground beef may be
contaminated with E. coli (E. coli O157:H7 and other Shiga toxin producing E. coli),
particularly dangerous strains of bacteria. Illnesses have occurred even when
ground beef patties were cooked until there was no visible pink. The only way
to ensure that ground beef patties are safely cooked is to use a food
thermometer, and cook the patty until it reaches 160 °F.
Cook all
meat and poultry to safe minimum internal temperatures:
·
Cook all raw beef,
pork, lamb and veal steaks, chops, and roasts to a minimum internal temperature
of 145 °F as measured with a food thermometer before removing meat from the
heat source. For safety and quality, allow meat to rest for at least three minutes
before slicing or consuming.
·
Cook all raw ground
beef, pork, lamb, and veal to an internal temperature of 160 °F as measured
with a food thermometer.
·
Cook all raw poultry
(raw or ground) to a safe minimum internal temperature of 165 °F as measured
with a food thermometer.
Heat hot
dogs to steaming hot and reheat any leftover food to 165 °F as measured with a
food thermometer. Be sure to clean the thermometer between uses.
Separate and
Cleanup
Bring
plenty of clean platters and utensils. Don't use the same platter and utensils
that held raw product to serve cooked product. Any bacteria present in the raw
meat or juices can contaminate the safely cooked product. If using a cooler,
leftover food is safe only if the cooler still has ice in it. Return cold foods
to the cooler, and chill leftovers promptly. Otherwise, discard leftover food.
Find out if your campsite has clean water. If not, you can bring clean water
for food preparation, handwashing, and cleaning utensils. You can also use
sanitizers that have at least 60% alcohol content.
Food Safety While Boating
Keeping
food safe for a day on the boat may not be quite as challenging as for a hike,
but when you are out on the water, the direct sunlight can be an even bigger
food safety problem. Remember the "Danger Zone" between 40 °F and 140 °F?
Bacteria multiply rapidly at warm temperatures and food can become unsafe if
held in the "Danger Zone" for over 2 hours. Above 90 °F, food can
become dangerous after only 1 hour. In direct sunlight, temperatures can climb
even higher than that. So, bring along plenty of ice, and keep the cooler
shaded or covered with a blanket. If you can’t bring enough ice to keep foods
cold, take along only non-perishable, shelf-stable foods.
Keep Your Cooler
Cool
A cooler
for perishable food is essential. It is important to keep it closed, out of the
sun, and covered, if possible, for further insulation. Better yet, bring two
coolers: one for drinks and snacks, and another for more perishable food. The
drink cooler will be opened and closed a lot, which lets hot air in and causes
the ice to melt faster. Pack your coolers with several inches of ice, blocks of
ice, or frozen gel-packs. Store food in watertight containers to prevent
contact with melting ice water.
Keep Cold Foods
Cold
Perishable
foods, like luncheon meats, cooked chicken, and potato or pasta salads, should
be kept in the cooler. Remember the rule: keep hot foods hot and cold foods
cold? And the 2-hour rule: no food should remain in the "Danger Zone" for more than 2 hours.
Unless you plan to eat those luncheon meats within 2 hours or 1 hour if at
elevated, warm temperatures of near 90 F., it needs to be kept in the cooler.
For optimum safety, consider buying it the night before, refrigerating it in a
shallow container and then packing it cold in the cooler.
Of course,
some foods don't need to be stored in the cooler: whole fresh fruits and
vegetables, nuts, trail mix, canned meat spreads, jerky, and peanut butter and
jelly. (However, once canned foods are opened, put them in the cooler.)
If you
don't have an insulated cooler, try freezing sandwiches for your outing. Use
coarse-textured breads that don't get soggy when thawed. Take the mayonnaise,
lettuce, and tomato with you to add at mealtime. In a pinch, plastic bags
packed with frozen gel packs or ice will keep things cold until lunchtime.
Freeze water in milk containers or plastic bottles for your cold source.
Cleanup
Cleanup on
the boat is similar to cleanup on land. If using a cooler, leftover food is
safe only if the cooler still has ice in it. Return cold foods to the cooler,
and chill leftovers promptly. Otherwise, discard leftover food. Bag up all your
trash to dispose of when you return to shore and clean up. Soap and potable
water are ideal, disposable wipes and hand sanitizer can be used for sanitizing
hands, utensils and surfaces.
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