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Grills, flags and food safety: How to keep your Fourth of July celebration safe

Grills, flags and food safety: How to keep your Fourth of July celebration safe
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As Americans prepare to celebrate the nation’s 249th birthday this Fourth of July, millions will gather for cookouts, parades and fireworks. But with summer heat and outdoor meals comes a less festive risk: foodborne illness.

According to the USDA, the summer months see a spike in food poisoning cases, often linked to outdoor meals where temperature control and cross-contamination precautions are easily overlooked. With vulnerable guests like young children, elderly adults, and pregnant women often present, taking food safety seriously is as patriotic as flying the flag.

Tips for staying safe at your July 4th cookout

One USDA study found 56 percent of consumers skip handwashing during meal prep, and 95 percent don’t wash properly when they do. Don’t let that be your party. Proper hygiene and temperature checks can prevent a fun day from ending in a trip to the ER.

High-risk holiday foods

Some traditional July 4th fare carries more risk than others:

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