
Food Safety
In the United States, approximately 76 million cases of food-borne illness occur each year. More than 325,000 people are hospitalized for food-borne illness and 5,000 will die from food-borne illness.
Following the four steps of Clean, Separate, Cook and Chill are essential for home food safety. These four steps used to be known as the "Fight Bac!" rules. The new message from USDA and the Partnership for Food Safety Education is "Be Food Safe: Harmful Bacteria Can Make People Sick."
Programs
CFS Extension educators in your community might offer one or more of these programs — contact your county Extension office for details.
- Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program
Targeted to limited-resource households with pregnant women and pre-teen children. Through hands-on learning, participants learn the skills and motivation needed to choose and prepare healthy and safe meals for their families. It is delivered in 14 Indiana counties. - Family Nutrition Program
Available to food stamp recipients in 53 Indiana counties. Through programs in homes and community settings, participants develop the knowledge and skills in nutrition, meal planning, food purchasing, and food preparation and safety. - Food Irradiation: Ensuring Your Food's Safety
Program teaches about the process of food irradiation, how consumers can make informed decisions when given the choice of irradiated food, and their responsibility in maintaining safe food. - Have a Healthy Baby
Prenatal nutrition education program consisting of six lessons that emphasize nutrition and lifestyle choices — smoking, drinking, and drugs. The program is research-based and taught by trained, caring professionals.
Publications
- Controlling Food Safety Using the HACCP Approach and Prerequisite Programs
- Drying Foods at Home
- E. coli O157:H7 — Concerns and Challenges for the Next Millennium
- Food Safety Advice When Traveling Abroad
- Food Safety for Outdoor Picnics
- Freezing Fruit at Home
- Freezing Vegetables at Home
- Let's Preserve Apples
- Let's Preserve Berries (Except Strawberries)
- Let's Preserve Cherries
- Let's Preserve Fruit Pie Fillings
- Let's Preserve Jelly, Jam, Spreads
- Let's Preserve Leafy Greens
- Let's Preserve Peaches, Apricots, Nectarines
- Let's Preserve Pears
- Let's Preserve Peppers
- Let's Preserve Pickles
- Let's Preserve Sauerkraut
- Let's Preserve Snap Beans
- Let's Preserve Strawberries
- Let's Preserve Sweet Corn
- Let's Preserve Tomatoes
- Listeria Monocytogenes: Survival of the Fittest
- Spotlight on Cupboard Storage
- Spotlight on Freezer Storage
- Spotlight on Refrigerator Storage
- Uncooked Jams
(For purchase)
Web Sites
- FDA Produce Safety for Consumers
- Fresh Preserving (Ball & Kerr)
- Indiana’s Food for the Hungry
Addresses the educational needs of those who work to provide emergency food assistance throughout the state of Indiana. The Web site has a food assistance directory, newsletter, and resources for emergency food programs and the public. - National Center for Home Food Preservation
- Preserving Food at Home: A Self-Study On-Line Course
- Purdue Extension - Preserving and Storing Foods Publications
- The University of Georgia Home Food Preservation Factsheets
Includes canning fruits, canning vegetables, jams, jellies, pickled products, sensational salsas, canning tomatoes/tomato products, jellies without sugar, and many more fact sheets
- USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning



