Food Safety

Harmful bacteria, viruses or parasites can contaminate food, causing food poisoning.

Use safe food handling practices to keep you and your family safe from food poisoning.

Check out the table below for a few tips.

CleanClean your hands, surfaces, and utensils often:Wash your hands in warm, soapy water for at least 20 seconds:Before and after you prepare food.After touching raw meat, poultry, fish, and seafood.Clean all surfaces, equipment, and utensils before and after you prepare food.
SeparateSeparate your raw foods from your cooked foods and foods that you won’t be cooking.Use different cutting boards and utensils for:Vegetables and fruits.Raw meat, poultry, fish, and seafood.
CookCook food completely. You can check this by using a digital food thermometer.For safe internal cooking temperatures of different foods, check out Health Canada’s safe cooking temperatures page.
ChillKeep ‘cold food cold’ and ‘hot food hot’. Bacteria can grow quickly when foods are in the temperature danger zone (between 4oC and 60oC).Refrigerate food and leftovers promptly at 4°C or below. Refrigerate food and leftovers within two hours to reduce the chance of bacteria growing.

For more information, check out Health Canada’s general food safety tips and interactive tool on food safety for food safety tips:

  • At the grocery store
  • In your kitchen
  • In your fridge
  • In your dining room

Who is at the highest risk of food poisoning and related complications?

Children aged five and under
People who are pregnant
Adults 60 years and older
People with weakened immune systems