Keeping Food Safe While Serving Outdoors

This afternoon I met some friends for lunch and as I drove through our beautiful downtown area in Manhattan, KS, I noticed that many people were taking advantage of the gorgeous weather and dining outside with friends. For our local community – outdoor dining is one of the remnants of COVID that we actually have come to enjoy on beautiful days. With spring in full swing and summer just around the corner, many foodservice operations are taking advantage of the warm weather by offering outdoor dining options.

Outdoor dining can be a great way to attract customers and increase revenue. Of course, we see this in restaurants, but we also see it in schools through the summer meal program.  While the venues and style of service are a bit different, food safety must remain core to these activities.  Here are some tips for keeping food safe while serving outdoors.

  • Keep food at the right temperature.
    • When serving food outdoors, it is important to keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold to prevent the growth of bacteria. If catering off-site events and/or serving outdoor buffets, it is vital to use chafing dishes, warming trays, insulated coolers, and ice baths to keep hot food at or above 135°F or cold food at or below 41°F. Monitor food temperatures regularly with a calibrated food thermometer to ensure that they stay within the safe temperature range.

Outdoor dining can be a great way to attract customers and increase revenue…but, food safety must remain core to these activities.


  • Protect food from pests.
    • Pests such as flies, bees, and ants can be a major problem when serving food outside. Make use of food covers, mesh netting, or other barriers to protect food from airborne insects. Keep food covered when not in use and store it in sealed containers to prevent pests from accessing it.
  • Practice good hygiene
    • I’ve often found that when our employees get outside the walls of our foodservice operation, they sometimes forget the basics of proper hand hygiene and sanitation. It is vital to remember the basics of hand hygiene – especially when you may not have handwashing stations as easily accessible as you do in your normal business. Proper hand hygiene is critical to preventing the spread of foodborne illnesses. Make sure that staff members wash their hands frequently and thoroughly. Provide hand sanitizer stations for customers and staff members to use and encourage them to use them often.
  • Control food waste
    • Ten years ago, I would have likely argued that food waste was not a food safety issue.  But it can be in this case because food waste can attract pests and if not stored appropriately can be a breeding ground for pathogenic bacteria on those warm and sunny days. When serving food outdoors, use smaller serving portions and limit the amount of time that food is left out. Store excess food in sealed containers and dispose of it promptly.
  • Plan for inclement weather
    • Inclement weather, especially in the Midwest where I live, can pose a challenge when serving food outdoors. Plan ahead by having a backup plan in case of rain or other weather-related events. Use tents or other shelters to protect food and customers from the elements and have a plan for quickly moving food and equipment indoors if necessary.

Last, but certainly not least – have a plan in general!  Don’t just decide mid-morning to serve lunch outdoors. As the old saying goes, failing to plan is planning to fail (or something like that).  Serving food outdoors can be a great way to attract customers and increase revenue, but it also requires special attention to food safety. Risk Nothing. 

The Cold Chain in the Hot Summer Months

Keeping foods at proper cold holding temperatures (between 28°F and 41°F maximum or 0°F for frozen food) from the food manufacturers to your customers has to be one of our strongest links to safe food. Sometimes that is referred to in the food industry as “maintaining the COLD CHAIN”. Any slip ups in the cold chain, and we have a weak link. If you accept the food, you have greatly increased your foodborne illness risk and compromised your food quality.

Routes of Foodborne Illness & Germs

From your sniffling coworker to the raw chicken on your kitchen cutting board, everyday life is full of potential infectious hazards. With germs so common and seemingly everywhere, knowing how germs spread is vital to preventing infection and foodborne illness.  There are seven possible ways for the transmission of bacteria and viruses to take place.  Although some of these microorganisms in our environment are good for us and protect us, disease causing pathogens are the germs or bad guys.

Handling Leafy Green Salad

We have had several produce outbreaks of foodborne disease from our lettuce, spinach, and other greens in the last several years that have been devastating to the produce growers and distributors, retail grocery stores, restaurants, and consumers.

Food Packaging Safety in a Vacuum

Extending the shelf life of fresh foods has come a long way in the food industry since curing meats with salt and sugar or canning vegetables with heat processing. The food service and consumer markets needed some better visual packages to draw the eye to the freshness factor and the technology of food packaging has filled our dinner plate. Vacuum packaging and modified atmosphere packaging, shortened to “MAP”, are the terms used for the method of food packaging used every time we choose convenience over more complex scratch meal preparation. According to industry statistics, billions of packages of vacuum and MAP-packaged foods flood the marketplace today. In both modified-atmosphere and vacuum packaging, food is packaged in a pouch made of barrier film.