Keep Food Safe When You’re ‘Powerless’ COLLEGE PARK. Md. Those thunderstorms so common during the summer months can do more than spoil a Fourth of July picnic. Heavy winds, excessive rain, and lightning can wreak ha voc with utility lines, causing power failures that leave consum ers without electricity for hours or even days. Although you may be power less to prevent such incidents, you can take actions to ensure the safe ty of your food supply when the lights go out, according to Dr. Mark A. Kan tor, a nutrition and food safety specialist with the Maryland Cooperative Extension Service. “First of all, purchase thermo meters for the freezer and refrig erator so you can keep track of the temperature in case die power fail s,” he said. “The thermometers should be sturdy and designed specifically for this use. Many hardware stores and supermarkets carry them.” If your electricity is off for only a few hours, you don’t have to take any special steps to protect your food supply, except to avoid opening the refrigerator and freez er doors. But a longer power fail ure will require some extra pre cautions. If you’re lucky enough to have a full freezer, Kantor said, you can expect food to remain frozen for two days. A half-fell freezer will keep food frozen for about one day, although you may be able to extend this time by grouping packages together so they retain the cold more effectively. You also can help keep food frozen longer by adding dry ice to your freezer when the power goes off. Twenty-five pounds of dry ice should hold a fell 10-cubic-foot freezer below freezing for three to four days. 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Box 126, Gettysburg, PA 17325 Phllllpaburg, NJ 08801 Call or write today (or more intormatlon 1-800-447-7436 the same amount of dry ice will keep it stable for two to three days. “If possible, find out where you can get dry ice before you need it,” said Kantor. “Utility compan ies sometimes distribute dry ice free of charge during extended power outages. Listen to radio an nouncements (on a battery-pow ered radio) regarding distribution points. You can also check the yellow pages in the phone book for dry ice suppliers.” If you do purchase dry ice, make sure you handle it properly. “Never touch it with your bare hands.” Kantor said. “It can freeze your skin quite badly. Instead, transport it in a cardboard box that you can place directly in the freez er, or wear heavy gloves and use tongs when handling it Keep the dry ice away from food items or place a piece of cardboard be tween the ice and food so items don’t stick to it.” When dry ice vaporizes, it drives out the surrounding oxy gen. so don’t stick your head intq the freezer and breathe vapors. . After a power failure, food will usually keep for four to six hours in a refrigerator, depending on how warm you kitchen is. If pow er will be out for longer than that, you may want to add block ice to the refrigerator. Don’t use dry ice it can freeze refrigerator items. You can help insulate your re frigerator and/or freezer by cover ing it with a blanket, which will help prevent the loss of cold air. Just make sure you don’t cover the air vents in case the power comes back on. Once power has been restored, it’s time to assess the damage. The following guidelines will help you decide which items to keep and which to throw out. If ice crystals are visible on frozen food and its temperature has remained at4o For below, it is safe to refreeze, although the quality of some items may suffer, ff the food has thawed completely, but still feeb cold, cook it right away and then serve or refreeze. In the case of meat, Kantor re commends using it in a recipe that allows for well-done rather than rare preparation. For example, cut a roast into thin strips and stir-fry, or use ground beef for spaghetti Walnut Partne PENNS CREEK (Snyder Co.) If you had asked Walnut Acres founder Paul Keene half a century ago what inspired his pioneering move into organic agriculture, his answer might well have been the same as today’s: “Each generation should live not as if we’ve bor rowed it from our children.” Thu simple quote has quided three generations of Keene family farmers. Celebrating a golden anniver sary has not slowed the drive of Paul Keene or his family as they take America’s most famous organic farm into the 21st Cen tury. This year’s Summer Harvest Festival at Walnut Acres on Satur day, August 10 promises to be the biggest yet Walnut Acres is again teaming up with the Pennsylvania Associa tion for Sustainable Agriculture (PASA) to offer more seminars, field demonstrations and activities than ever before including a special appearance by Organic Gardening Editor Mike McGrath. The Walnut Acres story began in India in the late 19305, when young Paul Keene met Mahatma Gandhi while working there. “It LIQUID MANURE SPREADER sauce rather than rare hamburgers Some foods can tolerate less time/temperature abuse than others. For example, fresh meats, poultry, lunch meats, hot dogs, eggs and milk should be discarded if they have been subjected to temperatures of 40 F or higher for more than two hours. Bacteria that cause food poisonings can multi ply to unsafe levels under these conditions. Fruits and vegetables, on the Acres Celebrates rship With Nature was Gandhi’s simple life, his pow erful personality wluch inspired me to return to the states and learn organic food production,” said Keene. In 1946 he and wife Betty began a farm of their own where they could live simply and apply techniques learned at an organic fanning school, with a $5,000 loan and just $2OO in cash. Walnut Acres seemed an ideal choice on the banks of the clear, pure waters of Penns Creek in picturesque Snyder County. There they began tending the soil in partnership with nature, constantly building up the fertility of the soil; always adding more than was taken away. As the Keenes built up the soil they developed the strict program of crop rotation and natural pest control that has made Walnut Acres a model for sustainable farming. Through good and bad harvests the Keenes turned Wal nut Acres into a successful work ing farm. Word of Walnut Acres and their wholesome specialty foods spread as the Keenes shared their harvest Their first food product was Apple Essence, which the Keenes pre pared from organic apples cooked over an open fire. One of the high lights of the PASA Summer Harvest Festival at Walnut Acres will be a commemorative apple butter boil to recreate the magic of making that fust batch of Apple Essence. Visitors to the PASA Summer Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 29, 1998-B7 other hand, can be cooked and served as long as there is no yeasty smell, sliminess, or evidence of mold. Juices can be used, pro vided they look and smell accept able. and well-wrapped hard cheeses, butter and margarine, can be kept unless mold and rancid od ors develop. For answers to food safety questions, call your local exten sion home economist. Harvest Festival at Walnut Acres can learn to apply the principles of organic fanning in their own farm and gardens as field stations demonstrate the latest in sustain able fanning techniques. Experts will give seminars and tours of the Walnut Acres cannery, mill, and bakery will be given throughout the day. A wealth of activities for the entire family will include every thing from country games, music and hayrides to sheepherding and draft horse plowing demonstra tions, an environmental exhibit featuring birds of prey, and an actual archeological dig for Native American artifacts. And of course there will be plenty of wholesome organic food for all to enjoy. The Summer Harvest Festival at Walnut Acres will be held on Saturday, August 10 from 10 am to 5 pm. Admission is $5 for adults 18 and over and $3 for ages 12-17. Children under 12 are admitted free. All admission pro ceeds benefit PASA. On Friday, August 9 a bus tour will visit a neaiby organic beef farm, an oiganic vegetable farm, and a composting operation. Advanced registration and a $2O tour fee are required. For more information, contact Walnut Acres at (800) 433-3998 or PASA at (814) 349-9856.