Food safety important when grilling

Kansas State University food scientist Karen Blakeslee says food safety needs to be part of summer parties, especially when those get-togethers involve grilling food outdoors.


“To start with,” she said, “wash your hands. That’s the No. 1 step before you start handling any food, and then wash them again after you’ve handled any kind of raw meat.”


Much like cooking food indoors, home chefs need to keep a food thermometer close at hand, Blakeslee said. For meat, there are three temperatures that consumers should store to memory:


• 145 degrees Fahrenheit for steaks, roasts, chops, fish and other whole cuts of meat.

• 160 F for ground meat, including beef, pork and lamb.

• 165 F for all types of poultry.


Those temperatures include products that are smoked, cooked on a grill or indoors.


The recommended temperatures relate to the internal temperature of the meat. “Without a food thermometer, it’s very subjective” as to whether the meat is cooked properly, Blakeslee said. Judging doneness by color or pressing the meat with your finger are also subjective, she noted.


To more accurately measure for doneness, insert the tip of the thermometer into the center of the meat. With a digital thermometer, the temperature sensor is normally in the tip, so those can be inserted into the top of the meat product.


“But the ideal way to do it – like with a hamburger – is to insert it from the side,” Blakeslee said. “That is the best way to reach the center of the product.”
A thermometer with a dial display is another option.

“If you look on the stem of a dial face thermometer, there should be a dimple, about halfway up the stem,” she said. “Insert this type of thermometer into the food so that the little dimple gets into the meat product to get an accurate measurement.”


Some other food safety tips that Blakeslee offered:

Keep meat cold until you’re ready to use it
Resist the temptation to let meat sit on a counter for long periods of time.

“You could let it warm up a little bit (before cooking) – about 30 minutes. But please refrain from letting it sit out for hours. That invites any bacteria that could be on the meat to start growing.”

Freeze meat that won’t be used soon after you buy it
If planning an event, consider buying meat 2-3 days before cooking it. Otherwise, Blakeslee said, “you need to freeze it.”


Frozen meat is best thawed in the refrigerator, not on a countertop. “Plan ahead for thawing,” Blakeslee said. “The amount of thawing time you’ll need depends on the size of your meat product.”


Steaks can typically be thawed in a refrigerator in 24 hours. A brisket might take 3-4 days.

Keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold
Side dishes are usually cold foods; keep them in a refrigerator until you’re ready to serve them. Ice chests are handy for chilling side dishes. Cold foods should be kept at 40 F or lower, while hot foods should be kept at 140 F or higher.

Store food and eat leftovers promptly
Store food within 1-2 hours of serving them. Foods should be divided into shallow containers and placed in the refrigerator.


“Today’s refrigerators are very efficient, so you do not need to set them on the counter until they cool,” Blakeslee said.


Leftovers should be eaten within 3-4 days, otherwise transferred to the freezer for later use.


“We all need to work better at reducing food waste,” she said. “One way to do that is managing leftovers. Leftovers are great; they make an easy lunch or quick supper, or you can re-purpose them into a completely different meal.”

‘Give mayo a break’
Blakeslee said mayonnaise often gets a bad rap for being a food safety concern, but the popular dressing is high in acid and can fend for itself.


“Mayo is not the problem,” Blakeslee said. “It’s what you mix into the mayo that is the problem. Cooked potatoes, hard boiled eggs…those are the ingredients that need refrigeration to reduce food safety risks.


“The mayonnaise is just going along for the ride,” she added. “So, give mayonnaise a break. It’s how you handle the rest of the food that really matters.”


More tips on food safety are available online from K-State Research and Extension at https://www.ksre.k-state.edu/foodsafety/.

  • Story by Pat Melgares, K-State Research and Extension news service

Monarchs rout Canaries, 22-1

Jan Hernandez of the Kansas City Monarchs delivered a triple as part of his cycle Saturday night May 28, at Legends Field in Kansas City, Kansas, against the Sioux Falls Canaries. (Photo by John Ellis, Kansas City Monarchs)

by Adam Cook, Monarchs

The Kansas City Monarchs (9-6) blew out the Sioux Falls Canaries (5-10) in the second game of the three-game weekend series Saturday night, 22-1.

After Monarchs starting pitcher Matt Hall kept the Canaries in the cage for the top of the first, Willie Abreu led the Monarchs’ offense with a bang as he sent the first pitch the Monarchs offense saw to the right field “Home Run Hill.”

Three batters later, Matt Adams sent a towering shot to the clubhouse past right field to bring in Gabby Guerrero and make the score 3-0. Little did anyone know, this was only the beginning to the Monarchs’ explosive night on offense.

The Canaries fired right back in the second, as Nick Gotta sliced an RBI double down the left field line to score Trey Michalczewski for what would become the Canaries’ only run of the game.

Hall then stranded the runners on the loaded bases and limited the damage, escaping the inning with only the one run allowed.

The Monarchs came back in the third with a flurry of base hits. Adams added to his night with a double to left-center and then moved station-to-station as David Thompson followed it up with a single that got Adams to third.

Jan Hernandez kept the line moving with a single to shallow right that scored Adams and moved Thompson across the infield to third base to bring the score to 4-1 Monarchs.

Casey Gillaspie capped the scoring in the big third inning with a double down the right field line that scored both Thompson and Hernandez, making the score 6-1 before giving the Canaries bats their next chance to bridge the gap.

Hall stayed on top of the Sioux Falls hitters in the top of the fourth, shutting them down in order for the second straight inning.

After the turn of the inning, the Monarchs continued putting up runs as they loaded the bases in the first three batters. Thompson led off the scoring with an RBI walk, only to be followed by a bases-clearing triple from Hernandez.

Gillaspie capped the scoring once again as he delivered an RBI single to right field to bring the score to 11-1 before the end of the inning.

In the top of the sixth, the Canaries put two runners on in Hall’s last inning of work, but Hall worked out of it, keeping the score 11-1 heading to the home half of the inning.

In the bottom of the inning, the Monarchs’ bats continued to deliver. Thompson crushed a no-doubt solo home run to left field for the only run in the inning, as the teams headed to the seventh with the score a lopsided 12-1 Monarchs.

The Monarchs only continued to pile on the runs in the seventh, as they loaded the bases in three batters for Guerrero, who made the Canaries pay with the Monarchs’ first grand slam of the year.

Thompson followed with a two-run bomb for his second two-home run game in his last four. A couple of base hits from Gillaspie and Pete Kozma netted one more run before the end of the inning, and the Monarchs left the inning with a massive 19-1 lead.

The Canaries were held at bay again in the top of the 8th, and just when they thought it couldn’t get any worse, the Monarchs piled three more on in the bottom half, including a homer from Hernandez to complete the cycle.

The top of the ninth ended just like most of the other top halves in this one, as the Canaries were retired for the final time in four batters to make the final score 22-1.

The Monarchs will face the Sioux Falls Canaries in the final game of the series at 3 p.m. Sunday, May 29. The game can be heard on the Monarchs Broadcast Network with the pre-game beginning at 2:30 p.m. and the video stream airing on aabaseball.tv.

Tickets to Monarchs games can be purchased by calling 913-328-5618 or by visiting monarchsbaseball.com.

  • Story from Monarchs

Warm and windy weather in today’s forecast

The lake at Leavenworth National Cemetery on Saturday, May 28. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
Sunday’s forecast will be windy in Wyandotte County. (National Weather Service graphic)
There will be a marginal risk of severe weather on Monday evening and an enhanced risk of severe weather on Tuesday. (National Weather Service graphic)

Strong southerly winds are possible today, as temperatures rise to a high near 89, according to the National Weather Service forecast.

A few wind gusts of up to 41 mph are possible, the weather service said.

Above normal temperatures are expected through Monday, Memorial Day, and windy weather will continue, according to the weather service.

Strong to severe storms will be possible late Monday, Monday night and Tuesday, according to the forecast.

Today, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 89, the weather service said. A south wind of 23 mph will gust as high as 41 mph.

Tonight, it will be partly cloudy, with a low of 73, according to the weather service. A south wind of 22 mph will gust as high as 39 mph.

On Monday, Memorial Day, it will be sunny, with a high near 87, and a south wind of 22 to 24 mph, gusting as high as 41 mph.

Monday night, there is a 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, with a low of 69, according to the weather service. A south wind of 10 to 17 mph will gust as high as 29 mph. Between a tenth and quarter-inch of rain is possible.

Tuesday, there is a 60 percent chance of precipitation, with showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 1 p.m., the weather service said. The high will be near 82 with a southwest wind of 9 to 11 mph, gusting as high as 22 mph. Between a quarter and half-inch of rain is possible.

Tuesday night, there is a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms likely, according to the weather service. The low will be around 58. Between a quarter and half-inch of rain is possible.

Wednesday, there is a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 1 p.m., the weather service said. The high will be near 72.

Wednesday night, there is a 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, with a low of 56, according to the weather service.

Thursday, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 73, the weather service said.