Summer’s Here! Outdoor Cooking Tips


With the holiday weekend fast approaching, I’m sure families all over the Puget Sound Region and across America are preparing to BBQ. Summer is here!

Earlier this week, Health Power for Minorities sent out some outdoor cooking tips in their July newsletter – to keep us all healthy and safe. Below is information directly from HPM’s newsletter. To sign up for their newsletter, click here.

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Outdoor cooking can be great fun when one considers everything that goes into:

  • The Cooking, especially different styles of grilling, barbecuing, and adding other seasonings, and
  • The Eating, including adding the sides, dressings, trimmings, and social activity.

These tips will help you in Cooking Good and Eating Healthy!

 

Physical Safety First:

  • When carrying food to another location use cooler with sufficient ice or ice packs to keep the food at 40oF or below
  • Be sure the grill is in a well-lit area.
  • Be sure the ventilation is good, and the grill is not near trees, shrubs, or buildings.
  • Keep children and pets away from the fire
  • Have water nearby in a squirt bottle in case the fire flares up

Food Safety Next:

  • Keep all perishable foods, like foods with dairy products meat and poultry cold to limit bacterial growth.
  • If the outdoor temperature is less than 90oF, they should not sit out more than two (2) hours.
  • If the outdoor temperature is higher than that, perishable foods should not sit out for more than one hour.

Preparing the Food:

  • Wash hands before and after preparing foods.
  • Completely thaw meat and poultry before grilling so it cooks more evenly.
  • Thaw food in a refrigerator or microwave, but if a microwave is used; cook as soon as thawing is done.
  • Marinate (soak in a savory sauce to enrich the flavor or tenderize) meat in the refrigerator, not at room temperature
  • Don’t use the same plate or utensils  for raw and cooked meat and poultry.  The juices from raw meat can contaminate the cooked food

About the Cooking:

  • Use a thermometer to be sure the food has been cooked to a safe temperature inside (You can’t tell from the outside).
  • Desirable Internal Temperatures (in Fahrenheit Degrees) for poultry, hamburgers, hot dogs, steaks and more are provided in our related blog post.
  • There are also tips about marinating food  including reusing marinade, what kind of containers to use, and how long to marinate different foods;

Grilling Hamburgers

  • Don’t keep uncooked ground beef in the refrigerator in the supermarket wrapping for more than two (2) days. . .
  • Be sure the grill is hot before cooking burgers to avoid their sticking to the grill.
  • Don’t salt burgers before they’re cooked because it draws the juices out, and More.

Enjoy cooking out, while staying safe!

Principal Outdoor Cooking Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture
For more Health Power Cooking Good and Eating Healthy Tip Sheets, click here. 

Mindfulness for Health


This is a busy time of year. Things to do, people to see, places to go. With the holidays and lots of end-of-year activities, our days and weeks have become more full than they usually are.

Yes, this is a busy time of year, and, every day is a good day to practice mindfulness. Mindfulness is “the practice of purposely focusing your attention on the present moment—and accepting it without judgment.”

Mindfulness is often thought of as meditation and has roots in Buddhism. HelpGuide.org and their collaborators at Harvard Health Publications share with us some of the health benefits of mindfulness. Through mindfulness, we may be “less likely to get caught up in worries about the future or regrets over the past, are less preoccupied with concerns about success and self-esteem, and are better able to form deep connections with others.”

Scientists are finding that mindfulness can:

  • help relieve stress
  • treat heart disease
  • lower blood pressure
  • reduce chronic pain
  • improve sleep
  • alleviate gastrointestinal difficulties

And psychotherapists are finding that mindfulness can help support treatment of:

  • depression
  • substance abuse
  • eating disorders
  • couples’ conflicts
  • anxiety disorders
  • obsessive-compulsive disorder

Ok – so now we know that mindfulness is a helpful practice. How do we do mindfulness?

HelpGuide.org shares lots of tips and ideas. Here are two of those tips – a quick introduction to mindfulness meditation and learning to stay present.

Practicing mindfulness meditation

  1. Sit on a straight-backed chair or cross-legged on the floor.
  2. Focus on an aspect of your breathing, such as the sensations of air flowing into your nostrils and out of your mouth, or your belly rising and falling as you inhale and exhale.
  3. Once you’ve narrowed your concentration in this way, begin to widen your focus. Become aware of sounds, sensations, and your ideas.
  4. Embrace and consider each thought or sensation without judging it good or bad. If your mind starts to race, return your focus to your breathing. Then expand your awareness again.

Learning to stay in the present

A less formal approach to mindfulness can also help you to stay in the present and fully participate in your life. You can choose any task or moment to practice informal mindfulness, whether you are eating, showering, walking, touching a partner, or playing with a child or grandchild. Attending to these points will help:

  • Start by bringing your attention to the sensations in your body
  • Breathe in through your nose, allowing the air downward into your lower belly. Let your abdomen expand fully.
  • Now breathe out through your mouth
  • Notice the sensations of each inhalation and exhalation
  • Proceed with the task at hand slowly and with full deliberation
  • Engage your senses fully. Notice each sight, touch, and sound so that you savor every sensation.

When you notice that your mind has wandered from the task at hand, gently bring your attention back to the sensations of the moment.

I’m curious. What would happen if we each practiced one of these activities every day – or even every other day or once a week? What difference could this make in our daily lives? How would we act differently? How would others see us differently?

I invite you to give one of these practices a try – or find a different activity that works for you. If there’s a different practice that works for you, please share it with us!

Wishing you Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year.