Partnership for Food Safety Education

FightBAC!

  • Food Safety Basics
    • The Core Four Practices
    • Featured Resources
  • Food Poisoning
    • About Foodborne Illness
    • Foodborne Pathogens
    • Causes & Symptoms
    • Food Safety Glossary
  • Food Safety Education
    • National Food Safety Month
    • Safe Flour Handling
    • The Story of Your Dinner
    • Food Safety Mythbusters
    • Safe Poultry Handling
    • Prep Yourself: Delivery Food Is on the Way
    • Safe Produce
    • Recall Basics
    • Go 40 or Below
    • Safety in All Seasons
  • K-12 Education
    • Curricula & Programs
      • Grades K – 3
      • Grades 3 – 5
      • Grades 4 – 8
      • Grades 9 – 12
    • Hands On
    • Kids Games & Activities
    • School Lunches
  • Child Care
    • Babies & Toddlers
    • Child Care Training
    • Kids Games & Activities
  • Safe Recipes
    • Safe Recipe Style Guide
    • Safe Recipe Activity for Middle School
    • Cookbooks
    • Appetizers
    • Side Dishes
    • Entrees
    • Desserts
  • Free Resources
    • Recorded Webinars
    • World Food Safety Day
    • Global Handwashing Day
    • Recursos en español
    • Coronavirus Resources
    • Evaluation Toolkit
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Board of Directors
    • Who Is Involved
    • PFSE Staff
    • Brand Assets
    • BAC Fighter Ambassadors
    • Job Openings
    • Contact Us
  • Get Involved
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • 2025 Conference
  • News & Blogs

Search Results for: food safety holidays

Lisa’s Table Is All About Safe Dinners

April 3, 2020

Meet Lisa

Lisa Treiber is a dedicated BAC Fighter who is passionate about keeping her community safe. She is an Extension Agent at Michigan State University, and she regularly uses Fight BAC! resources in her curriculum.

Lisa values raising awareness around safe food handling practices. Throughout the semester she teaches courses that remind students how to stay healthy. She also shares The Story of Your Dinner resources — particularly around the holiday season. She has done this for many years and has noticed that her community responds positively to it.

Lisa’s Table Spreads Awareness for the Holidays

This past holiday season, Lisa dedicated a table to food safety in the atrium of the Midland County Building Department. She enlarged food safety tips from The Story of Your Dinner and made them into laminated tiles. The tiles were arranged to be easily read by anyone who passes through the building. Lisa is thankful for the clear messages on each tile like “Suds up for 20 seconds” and “Keep your refrigerator at 40 °F or below.”

Lisa went a step further and printed off recipes with food safety steps and left them on the table. She worked hard to emphasize the importance of food safety during the holiday season, and it was well received by her peers and community. She was pleasantly surprised to see over 50 recipes had been taken from the table by the diverse population that walks through the building.

Years of Community Engagement at the Table

This isn’t the first year Lisa has created a table display. A couple years ago, she increased community engagement by holding a drawing for those who stopped at the table. Over 75 people entered, and the winner received a fridge thermometer to ensure their fridge was at a food-safe temperature. The county health department sanitarian workers who approved the display said that it was “wonderful.”

Lisa feels that with the number of those who have responded each year, she is getting her message across and doing her part in spreading awareness to her community. She appreciates that the resources from the Partnership for Food Safety Education are diverse and can be easily tweaked to be used throughout the entire year.

Lisa Treiber is an Extension Agent at Michigan State University. She can be reached at treiber@msu.edu.

You can make sure families have the safe food handling information that they need to reduce their risk of food poisoning with a personal contribution today. Click here to make a gift.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, Fight BAC, Food handling, food poisoning, food safety, Food safety resources, Food safety teacher, foodborne illness, prevent foodborne illness, recipes

Social Media Graphics — The Story of Your Dinner

Food Safety Tips
Pathogens
Air Fyer Tips
Kids’ Activities
Handwashing
Holidays

Food Safety Tips Graphics

Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 1
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 2
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 3
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 4
Español – Enjabone por 20
segundos.
Español – Comience con
el área limpia.
Español – Mantenga los
alimentos separados.
Español – No enjuagar la
carne o las aves.
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 5
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 6
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 7
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 9
Español – Mantenga su
refrigerador a 40 °F
o menos.
Español – Lea y siga las
instrucciones de
cocinar del paquete.
Español – Enjuague frutas
y vegetales
frescas.
Español – Nunca descongele
a
temperatura
ambiente.
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 8
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 10
Story of Your Dinner Consumer Safety Tips 11
Español – Coloque la carne
y las aves en la bolsa
de plástico provista en
la carnicería.
Español – Use un termómetro
para alimentos.
Español – No sobras de comida pasados 3-4 días.

Air Fryer Tips

Holiday Handwashing Tips

Pathogens

Story of Your Dinner Campylobacter social media graphic
Story of Your Dinner e coli social media image
Story of Your Dinner Salmonella social media graphic

Kids’ Activities Graphics

Holiday Graphics

Story of Your Dinner General social media graphic
Story of Your Dinner Thanksgiving social media graphic
Story of Your Dinner Happy Holidays social media graphic
Story of Your Dinner New Year social media graphic

Brilliant Buffets and Party Platters

party plattersA popular way to celebrate holidays or any party occasion is to invite friends and family to a buffet. However, this type of food service, where foods may be out for long periods leaves the door open for uninvited guests — bacteria that cause foodborne illness. Here are some tips for a safe and brilliant buffet:

Safe Food Handling
Always wash your hands with warm water and soap for 20 seconds before and after handling food. Clean kitchen surfaces, dishes and utensils with hot water and soap. Always serve food on clean plates — never those previously holding raw meat or poultry. Bacteria that may have been present in raw meat or poultry can cross-contaminate the food to be served.

Ready to Cook a Feast
If you are cooking foods ahead of time for your party, be sure to cook foods thoroughly to safe internal temperatures.

Keep Hot Foods HOT And Cold Foods COLD
Hot foods should be held at 140 °F or warmer. On the buffet table you can keep hot foods hot with chafing dishes, slow cookers and warming trays. Cold foods should be held at 40 °F or colder. Keep foods cold by nesting dishes in bowls of ice. If you buy party trays at the store, remove lid and fill with ice. Put the tray on the lid for a handy cooling station. Bacteria can also multiply quickly in moist desserts that contain dairy products. Keep eggnog, cheesecakes, cream pies and cakes with whipped-cream or cream-cheese frostings refrigerated until serving time.

Safely Sauced
Some sauces, dressings and even dessert recipes contain uncooked eggs. If your homemade recipes call for uncooked eggs, you can modify them by using pasteurized eggs, pasteurized egg product or cooking the egg mixture on the stovetop to 160 °F. Then follow the recipe’s directions.

The 2-Hour Rule
Foods should not sit at room temperature for more than two hours. Keep track of how long foods have been sitting on the buffet table and discard anything there two hours or more.

Storing the Smorgasbord
Divide cooked foods into shallow containers to store in the refrigerator or freezer until serving. This encourages rapid, even cooling. Reheat foods to 165 °F. Arrange and serve food on several small platters rather than on one large platter. You can prepare extra serving platters and dishes ahead of time, store them in the refrigerator or keep them hot in the oven (set at approximately 200 to 250 °F) prior to serving.

Healthy Guests: Happy Holidays flyer

Download a Healthy Guests: Happy Holidays flyer

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

Copyright © 2026 · Partnership for Food Safety Education

Facebook X-twitter Pinterest Linkedin Instagram Youtube Youtube Envelope
Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Disclaimer