Pollan

  • Posted: November 3rd, 2011 - 8:10pm by Doug Powell

     Food hucksters sell nostalgia. See Michael Pollan on The Colbert Report for a fine example (video only works in the U.S.).

    Biking home with Sorenne yesterday from school, a 20-something was walking a Brisbane sidewalk with pallets of strawberries and yelled out, “Want to buy some strawberries?”

    “No.”

    He then sold a pallet to the owner of a shoe store.

    The Salt Lake Tribune reports that some 2,100 Utahns – people who live in Utah, I guess -- have been sickened with salmonella from homemade queso fresco.

    The Salt Lake Valley Health Department has tracked down one source of the outbreak — an unnamed man dubbed "Mr. Cheese" who was making the product with raw milk and selling it to a Salt Lake City restaurant/deli.

    The health department has confirmed that 73 people were sickened with the illness that causes diarrhea, fever and abdominal pain. But they estimate that hundreds more were ill and never reported it to the health department.

    "They should not be purchasing food products in shopping center parking lots, [from people] distributing it out of their trunks or door to door," said Royal DeLegge, director of environmental health at the health department. "When you go into a retail setting, a deli or a store, you’re looking for labeling on the products."

    The cheese probe took three years, involved a criminal investigator and extended to a fast-food franchise where Mr. Cheese’s wife worked.

    People began to get sick in 2009 with Salmonella Newport, and the health department warned people not to buy the Mexican-style soft cheese from unapproved sources. Another 22 Newport cases popped up in 2010. The health department couldn’t find a common cause but heard of a woman selling cheese in a parking lot.

    By June this year, another 32 people were sick with the strain. They commonly identified four restaurants and a market, where the local and state health department took samples of their queso fresco and samples from preparation areas. It found a positive DNA match from the cheese in the restaurant/deli.

    That’s when the police got involved.

    The Utah Department of Agriculture and Food had a name of a potential manufacturer of the cheese, who had a criminal past.

    A criminal investigator for the county’s District Attorney’s Office put together a photo lineup for the restaurant owner, who identified his queso fresco source and called him "Mr. Cheese."

    The health department later learned the man — whom they aren’t naming — made the cheese in his home using raw milk from a Midway dairy that is not authorized to sell raw milk. The man also is not licensed to manufacture cheese.
    Food manufacturers are not allowed to produce products in their home because of the risk of contamination from sources such as pets and children.

    Mr. Cheese’s wife may have contaminated her workplace with the queso fresco. Four customers and a food handler at four locations of a fast-food chain were sickened this year.

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  • Posted: February 1st, 2011 - 10:10pm by Doug Powell

    oprah_cargill_cow_skin_11.jpg

    The bartender was riveted. So was the waitress. My requests for a beverage
    on a quiet Tuesday afternoon in Kansas City in 1998 would have to wait until
    commercial. Such was the power of Oprah.

    That's Oprah Winfrey - actress cum talk show diva – who today did a segment on beef production as part of her go-vegan spiel.

    The results were far more conciliatory than earlier meat outings on Oprah, and the credit goes to Cargill, who opened one of their Colorado processing plants to Oprah’s cameras and rather than resort to a corporate spokesthingy, featured a surprisingly effective Nicole Johnson-Hoffman, the plant’s general manager.

    Things didn’t go so well for the meat folks in 1996.

    On March 29, 1996, nine days after the U.K. officially linked bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE, with a new human disease, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced they were expediting regulations prohibiting ruminant protein in ruminant feeds, boosting
    surveillance and expanding research.

    The same day, several producer groups, including the U.S. National Cattlemen's Beef Association (NCBA), issued a statement supporting the moves and instituted a voluntary ban on ruminant protein in ruminant feed. Draft legislation was published in January 1997 and enacted into law later that year.

    Then came Oprah. On April 16, 1996, Oprah announced during a show on food safety and mad cow disease she would stop eating hamburgers because of fears over BSE and that she was shocked after a guest said meat and bone meal made from cattle was routinely fed to other cattle to boost their meat and milk production.

    The camera showed members of the studio audience gasping in surprise as vegetarian activist Howard Lyman explained how cattle parts and downer cattle (downer is the generic term used to describe cattle who can simply no longer stand) were rendered and fed to other cattle, and that BSE could make AIDS look like a common cold. The chief scientist for the U.S. National Cattleman’s Beef Association, rather than stressing the risk management actions that had been taken, was left arguing that cows were not vegetarians because they drank milk.

    Today’s broadcast was different. Foodie journalist Michael Pollan wants people to know where their food comes from; Cargill obliged.

    “Lisa Ling travels to Colorado, where Cargill, the biggest producer of ground beef in the world, gives her a rare inside look at how our meat is made.

    “Upon arrival, the cattle are held in pens for two hours to calm them before they're sent to be slaughtered. Each cow is then shot in the head with a bolt, which renders it insensible to pain. The cow's artery is then cut, and about two minutes later, it dies from blood loss. After the animal's death, the body is immediately washed, the skin is removed, and within minutes, the workers also remove the hooves, the hide and the head. The carcass is then moved to a giant cooler, where it stays for up to two days. After it's been inspected and graded, it's packaged, loaded on trucks and soon ends up in our local restaurants and stores.

    “Nicole says she was happy to have Lisa at the plant, because she thinks people should know where their food is coming from. ‘I would not ridicule people who believe that you shouldn't eat animals, but I would say that we are committed to doing it right. And I believe that when animals are handled with dignity and harvested carefully, that's the natural order of things,’ says Nicole.

    Whether you eat meat or not, Nicole thinks everyone who's interested in the American food system can work together to create better results. ‘I think we're all on the same path trying to figure out the right way to get to good health for our families and environmental sustainability and humane treatment,’ she says. ‘We'll find a better result together, even if we have perhaps different perspectives or different beliefs.’”

    The slaughterhouse portion of the video is available at:=

    http://www.oprah.com/oprahshow/Inside-a-Slaughterhouse-Video/topic/oprahshow

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  • Posted: January 10th, 2010 - 12:00am by Doug Powell

    barf_manifesto_0.jpg
    Author: 
    Doug Powell

    Journalist Michael Pollan has polled readers and come up with 64 rules to govern eating.

    But he forgot the most important one: ignore lists.

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    Food Safety Policy  |  0 Comments
    64, eat, Food, list, michael, Pollan
  • Posted: October 6th, 2009 - 8:40pm by Doug Powell

    I figure the Chinese–funded U.S. bailout has at least been good for Denis Leary, Howie Long, and the dude who does dirtiest jobs cause they all got gigs selling American cars.

    What’s worse is that sustainably-minded Michael Pollan is stiffing students for $25,000 to come and share his menu planner.

    As reported in Feedstuffs today, Pollan spoke at the University of Wisconsin-Madison last week, some farmers and aggie types challenged Pollan’s, uh, views of agriculture, and that Pollan was paid  $25,000 to speak.

    Pollan has a university gig like me, although I’m not sure how he got it. My cv or resume is on-line and anyone can see it. Today I got two requests to speak: one with the Missouri public health folks, one with some food safety conference in Chicago. In both cases, I said, cover my expenses, cause otherwise I’m taking money away from undergraduate and graduate students, money that I have to raise. But no fees.

    Why anyone would waste $25,000 on Pollan is baffling.
     

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  • Posted: August 19th, 2009 - 8:44pm by Doug Powell

    Michael Batz sent me a link to a story that took me on a magic carpet ride to the past (Batz also says he coined the term, ‘faith-based food safety’ but maybe he’s on his own magic carpet).

    As an undergraduate university student some 25 years ago, I would read the N.Y. Times and Harper’s magazine, and marvel at the sentence structure and the issues that were exposed by hard-hitting journalists.

    But over time, my own knowledge increased, and I realized that several of these exposes were really just literary clichés, citing a few sources here and there, usually to validate a pre-existing ideal.

    The initial realization was sorta gross (and yes, Michael Pollan was an editor of Harper’s back then, developing the skill set of a committed demagogue rather than investigative journalist).

    The same techniques are on full display at the Atlantic Food Channel in a piece by Josh Viertel entitled, Why small farms are safer.

    The author offers absolutely no evidence why small farms are safer, but does drop that he studied philosophy, his educated customers may be dumb, rides barefoot in buses and that Subway subs smell of industrial food.

    If wannabe farmer Josh wanted to convince anyone that small farms were safer, he would present outbreak data, and rather than saying what his farm isn’t – sorta like organics isn’t GE, isn’t synthetic pesticides, isn’t whatever – he’d state what his farm did to ensure food safety, specifically water quality and testing, soil amendments and employee sanitation.

    The author even whines that in 2006, he had trouble moving his spinach crop “all because Cargill's cows pooped in Dole's lettuce. It didn't seem right then. It doesn't now.”

    Except it was poop from a grass-fed cow-calf operation that contaminated the transitional organic spinach in 2006 that sickened over 200 and killed 5.

    Data often interferes with demagogues.

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  • Posted: June 12th, 2009 - 1:54pm by Doug Powell

    I have a lot of respect for my friend Frank.

    Anyone can be a poser and critic; Frank actually tries to make change.

    Frank’s the head of food safety at Wal-Mart. He used to be head of food safety at Walt Disney in Orlando, and when I visited with Frank and his staff in Bentonville, Arkansas a couple of months ago, he was enthusiastically telling me about the challenges of providing safe food – that’s food that doesn’t make people barf – to millions of people on a daily basis.

    “Disney was a challenge. This is a lot bigger.”

    Frank’s even put his thoughts on paper, in a book called, Food Safety Culture, published last year.

    Unlike Food, Inc., the movie version won’t be opening at theatres any time soon.

    As far as I can tell, because I haven’t seen the movie and won’t until it comes on my cable movie channels, Food, Inc. is a little about food safety, and only because Fast Food Nation author Eric Schlosser figured out that if you mention food safety a bunch of times, it sells more books or movies (see the Colbert clip below). The rest is about all things perceived to be bad about food, like genetic engineering, animal welfare, and whatever else.

    Frank has to provide safe food to millions of people every day … or he gets sued.

    Some people, like Michael Pollan,  are journalism professors at Berkeley and can reiterate bullshit like grass-fed cattle have lower levels of E. coli O157:H7.

    Dude, just cause it’s written a bunch of times on the Internet doesn’t make it true.

    Some people are biology professors, like Dave Renter at Kansas State, who doesn’t make movies but does know that E. coli O157:H7 and friends are complicated, and show up in lots of places. Oh, and it was a grass-fed cow-calf operation that was responsible for the E. coli O157:H7 outbreak in transitional organic spinach in 2006 that sickened 200 and killed four. There are many more outbreaks linked to biology rather than the politically convenient factory farming. Some people, like Frank, are actually responsible for delivering safe food.

    Frank writes in his book, Food Safety Culture: Creating a Behavior-based Food Safety Management System, that an organization’s food safety systems need to be an integral part of its culture.

    Consumers at the local market, the stop-n-shop or the supermarket, can ask someone, how do I know this food won’t make me barf? While such talk may be socially frowned upon, it’s time to put aside the niceties and bureau-speak and talk directly about safe food.  Ask at Wal-Mart; ask at your local market. I know if Frank were there, he’d be able to answer.

    Schlosser comers across as an idiot.
     

    The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    Eric Schlosser
    www.colbertnation.com
    Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorStephen Colbert in Iraq
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