Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
USDA: Meat derided as “pink slime” can now be called ground beef
You might remember exactly where you were in 2012 when your eyes were first assaulted by that “pink slime” video: pastel pink goo coiled sausage-like from a machine, allegedly destined for your fast-food burger. Chef Jamie Oliver campaigned against the substance; McDonald’s pledged to stop using it; lawsuit ensued; and after a few years, the controversy largely dissolved from the public eye. But now “pink slime” is back. In
December 2018, the United States Department Of Agriculture’s Food
Safety And Inspection Service quietly reclassified “lean finely textured
beef,” which some deride as “pink slime,” as “ground beef.” Beef Magazine reports
the company that manufactures this product, Beef Products Incorporated,
informed its suppliers on Dec. 21 that new USDA guidelines allowed it
to refer to that product as simply “ground beef,” and a spokesperson for
the USDA FSIS confirmed the reclassification to The Takeout. “After reviewing the Beef Product Inc.’s (BPI) submission of a new
product and new production process, FSIS determined that the product
meets the regulatory definition of ground beef under the law in 9 CFR 319.15(a) and may be labeled accordingly,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement to The Takeout.
According to the FSIS, Beef Products Incorporated asked the USDA to
reconsider its product’s classification. That ultimately led to a
months-long review and the change in nomenclature. Don’t freak out yet—we haven’t discussed what this product
actually is. Lean finely textured beef is the result of a mechanical
process that begins with beef trimmings. As The New Food Economy outlines
in a thorough explanation of this process, about a third of a cattle’s
weight is trimmings, or fatty portions of meat that slaughterhouse
workers separate from the muscle with knives. Beef Products Incorporated
then heats those trimmings and passes them through a centrifuge, which
divides the fat from the small portion of meat in the trimmings. Fat can
be sold as tallow, while the small remaining portion of lean meat is
what’s been referred to as lean finely textured beef, or “pink slime” to
its critics. The UDSA has previously allowed this for use as a
component of ground beef without any special label; but what changed in
December is that the USDA now allows this lean finely textured beef to itself be labeled ground beef. (In Food Inc., a BPI executive claims this ingredient is found in 70 percent of American burgers.)...MORE
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