Summer is a season associated with outdoor gatherings, picnics, and increased consumption of chilled and ready-to-eat foods. Yet the same warm temperatures that make summer enjoyable also create ideal conditions for harmful bacteria to multiply. Perishable foods such as meat, dairy, eggs, seafood, and fresh produce can spoil rapidly when exposed to heat, increasing the risk of foodborne illness. To keep food safe and fresh during summer, both households and food businesses must strengthen their temperature control measures and adopt practical, season-specific food handling practices.
Centre For Food Safety – News You Can Trust
Visual cues are unreliable in determining doneness, especially in outdoor cooking where direct heat may brown the exterior before the interior is cooked. Using a thermometer ensures that foods reach safe internal temperatures:
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Poultry: 74°C
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Ground meats: 71°C
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Whole cuts of beef/lamb: 63°C
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Fish: 63°C or until flaky
These temperatures are internationally recognized as necessary to destroy common pathogens (FSANZ, 2023).













