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Advisory Regarding Ground Beef Sold in Five States From September 19 - November 5, 2007.


Safeway Urges Consumers to Practice Safe Food Handling and Preparation Practices

PLEASANTON, Calif. -- Safeway has been notified by the USDA USDA,
n.pr See United States Department of Agriculture.
 that it may have received raw ground beef products affected with a strain of Salmonella salmonella

Any of the rod-shaped, gram-negative, non-oxygen-requiring bacteria that make up the genus Salmonella. Their main habitat is the intestinal tract of humans and other animals.
 Newport between September 19 and November 5 in five states -- Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico New Mexico, state in the SW United States. At its northwestern corner are the so-called Four Corners, where Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah meet at right angles; New Mexico is also bordered by Oklahoma (NE), Texas (E, S), and Mexico (S). . There have been no reported illnesses in Hawaii or New Mexico. There is a single reported case in Idaho that has no apparent ties to Safeway stores.

This is not a recall, nor is the ground beef in Safeway stores today the subject of the alert. The USDA alert refers to products that may have been sold at Safeway stores seven or more weeks ago. This notice also does not include fresh ground beef patties. The USDA alert does not relate to store handling or food safety practices.

To date, no Safeway product has tested positive for Salmonella Newport and the USDA has not definitively identified one product, retailer or establishment that is the source of the contamination. In response to the alert, however, the company is asking customers who have raw ground beef products in their freezer freezer

the compartment in which meat and offal are stored at freezing temperatures of 10 to 16°F (-12 to -9°C) although there is a trend to lower temperatures of 0 to -22°F (-18 to -30°C).
 purchased in these particular states between September 19 and November 5 to discard the product, as advised by the USDA.

Safeway is committed to ensuring the safety of our customers and the products we sell. We employ rigorous food safety standards Safety standards are standards designed to ensure the safety of products, activities or processes, etc. They may be advisory or compulsory and are normally laid down by an advisory or regulatory body that may be either voluntary or statutory.  in our stores and insist on the same level of commitment from our suppliers and vendors. Our food safety standards and practices are among the strictest in the industry.

Proper cooking kills Salmonella Newport. Safeway is using this opportunity to remind consumers of proper procedures for cooking ground beef and other food products.

* Wash hands with warm, soapy water for at least 20 seconds before and after handling raw meat and poultry poultry, domesticated fowl kept primarily for meat and eggs; including birds of the order Galliformes, e.g., the chicken, turkey, guinea fowl, pheasant, quail, and peacock; and natatorial (swimming) birds, e.g., the duck and goose. . Wash cutting boards, dishes and utensils with hot, soapy water. Immediately clean spills.

* Keep raw meat, fish and poultry away from other food that will not be cooked. Use separate cutting boards for raw meat and cooked foods. Consumers should eat ground beef only when it is cooked to a safe internal temperature of 160[deg]F.

* Color is NOT a reliable indicator that ground beef has been cooked to a temperature high enough to kill harmful bacteria. The only way to be sure ground beef is cooked to a high enough temperature to kill harmful bacteria is to use a thermometer thermometer, instrument for measuring temperature. Galileo and Sanctorius devised thermometers consisting essentially of a bulb with a tubular projection, the open end of which was immersed in a liquid.  to measure the internal temperature.

* Refrigerate re·frig·er·ate  
tr.v. re·frig·er·at·ed, re·frig·er·at·ing, re·frig·er·ates
1. To cool or chill (a substance).

2. To preserve (food) by chilling.
 raw meat within two hours after purchase or one hour if temperatures exceed 90[deg]F. Refrigerate cooked meat and poultry within two hours after cooking.

Consumers with food safety questions can call the USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 1-888-674-6854 or the USDA food safety consumer website at AskKaren.gov.
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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Dec 21, 2007
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