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Firing Up the Grill for America’s 250th? Keep Your Texas Cookout Safe with These Simple Moves

Chi H. by Chi H.
July 1, 2026
in Lifestyle, Public Safety, Top News
0
Texas Cookout
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From brisket to burgers to the classic backyard spread, a few small habits keep the party fun, the food safe, and everyone off the couch and back at the picnic table

Saturday, July 4, 2026, all weekend long — wherever your backyard, park, or lake spot happens to be. Bring the thermometer, the cooler, and the appetite.

Well neighbor, it’s officially the big one — America turns 250 this Fourth of July, and if you’re anything like the rest of Texas, you’ve already got the grill scrubbed, the coolers pulled out of the garage, and a list of who’s bringing what. Whether you’re smoking a brisket, flipping burgers, or setting up a full spread out at the lake, this weekend is made for good food, good people, and long summer afternoons that stretch straight into the fireworks.

Here’s the deal, though. Texas heat is no joke, and the same July sun that makes a cookout feel like a cookout also turns your picnic table into a bacteria buffet if you’re not paying attention. The good news: the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service just put out a quick refresher on outdoor food safety, and every tip is easy enough to fold right into how you’re already cooking.

“The summer heat increases food safety risks, but simple steps can prevent foodborne illness from outdoor gatherings,” Under Secretary for Food Safety Dr. Mindy Brashears said in the release. She points to three easy wins: keep perishables in coolers or insulated containers, follow the two-hour rule (or one hour when it’s above 90 degrees — which, let’s be honest, it will be), and grill your meats to safe internal temperatures.

Let’s start where most cookouts start: the marinade. Always marinate your meat in the fridge, not on the counter — those Texas kitchen temperatures do the bacteria’s work for them. And if you’ve been using that marinade on raw chicken or beef and you want to brush it on later as a sauce or dip, boil it for a few minutes first. That quick simmer kills anything the raw meat left behind.

Now the fun part — the grill. This is where a good food thermometer earns its keep. Guessing by color or feel is how backyard chefs end up with pink chicken and worried guests. Steaks, chops, and roasts (beef, pork, lamb, or veal) hit safe territory at 145 degrees. Fish and shellfish, same number — 145 degrees. Ground meats climb a bit higher: 160 degrees for ground beef, pork, lamb, or veal. And chicken and turkey, whether whole or ground, need to hit 165 degrees to be safe. Check the temperature in a few different spots on the meat, because grills have hot spots and cold spots and the thickest part is usually the last to catch up.

Once everything’s cooked, do yourself one favor: grab a clean platter for the finished food. Never set the cooked burgers back on the same plate that carried the raw patties out to the grill. It sounds obvious, but it’s one of the easiest ways bacteria sneak from raw to done, and it happens at cookouts all the time.

Then comes the part most folks forget — the Danger Zone. Between 40 and 140 degrees, harmful bacteria multiply fast, and any perishable food left out longer than two hours (or just one hour once the thermometer climbs past 90 degrees) is asking for trouble. If you’re planning to keep the spread out for hours while people graze between horseshoes and swim breaks, keep hot foods hot at 140 or above in chafing dishes, slow cookers, or on a warm corner of the grill. Keep cold foods cold at 40 or below by nesting the bowls in ice or stashing them in a cooler right next to the serving table. Deviled eggs, potato salad, and grandma’s coleslaw don’t belong sitting in direct sun for four hours — no matter how good they taste.

Here’s the bottom line, neighbor. None of this is complicated. A thermometer, a clean platter, a cooler with plenty of ice, and a quick eye on the clock. That’s it. Do those four things and you’ve got a cookout that ends with fireworks and full bellies, not stomach cramps and a long night. It’s America’s 250th birthday, and Texas is going to celebrate it right — brisket smoke in the air, cold drinks in the cooler, kids running through the yard with sparklers, and every single person going home happy.

If a food-safety question comes up mid-grill and you want a real human to answer it, the USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline is open at 1-888-674-6854, or you can email [email protected]. Otherwise, fire it up, feed your people, and enjoy the long weekend. Happy 250th, Texas. See you at the fireworks.

Chi H.

Chi H.

As a Houstonian, I report on crtitical news and inspiring stories from the state of Texas. Before joining The Texas Insider, I worked at NTD Television as a news reporter and wrote for different publications.

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