5 Food Safety Tips For A Healthy Super Bowl Sunday
KEY POINTS
Apart from making them delicious, it s important to also make foods safe
Below are some food safety tips to keep your Super Bowl Sunday healthy and safe
Super Bowl is one of those events that bring people together. Whether they re together at the stadium to watch it live, at various venues to watch it with friends or hosting a viewing party at home, the Super Bowl always gives people a reason to gather together and, even enjoy their favorite foods while watching the event.
Although Sunday s
socially-distanced Super bowl will likely be different from what we are used to witnessing, and even viewing parties have to be adjusted to stay safe from COVID-19, the one thing that hasn t changed is the need to practice food safety so that people can enjoy the good food and the show without worrying about the chances of getting any food-borne illness.
Adding weeds to landscaping or vegetable plots might sound crazy to gardeners, but it just might be a cost-effective solution to ridding clogged shorelines of sargassum weed.
Scientists are evaluating the viability of using sargassum weed, actually a brown macro algae that washes up seasonally, as compost for gardens.
Florida Sea Grant and the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences are looking for a green solution to removing sargassum, which could also reduce costs for coastal counties and municipalities that have to haul away the stinky seaweed.
In normal quantities, sargassum seaweed provides essential protection for oceanic creatures, but since 2011, the volume of the macro algae has exploded. In 2019, the sargassum blanketed the Keysâ coastline and sat dormant in canals.
William Roderick Summerhill Jr. died at sunrise in Houston, Texas of natural causes on January 14th, 2021 at the age of 86. He was preceded in death by his wife,