Not content with an audience of food safety nerds, Carl went big, on ABC News last night.
Bigger stage, bigger scrutiny; more exposure, more criticism (unless you’re Tom Hanks).
As seen in the ABC news clip, Gerald Zirnstein grinds his own hamburger these days. Why? Because this former United States Department of Agriculture scientist and, now, whistleblower, knows that 70 percent of the ground beef we buy at the supermarket contains something he calls “pink slime.”
“Pink slime” is beef trimmings. Once only used in dog food and cooking oil, the trimmings are now sprayed with ammonia so they are safe to eat and added to most ground beef as a cheaper filler.
It was Zirnstein who, in an USDA memo, first coined the term “pink slime” and is now coming forward to say he won’t buy it (shurley shome mistake; wasn't it the Jamie Oliver ministry? No).
“It’s economic fraud,” he told ABC News. “It’s not fresh ground beef. … It’s a cheap substitute being added in.”
Zirnstein and his fellow USDA scientist, Carl Custer, both warned against using what the industry calls “lean finely textured beef,” widely known now as “pink slime,” but their government bosses overruled them.
According to Custer, the product is not really beef, but “a salvage product … fat that had been heated at a low temperature and the excess fat spun out.”
The “pink slime” does not have to appear on the label because, over objections of its own scientists, USDA officials with links to the beef industry labeled it meat.
“The under secretary said, ‘it’s pink, therefore it’s meat,’” Custer told ABC News.
ABC News has learned the woman who made the decision to OK the mix is a former undersecretary of agriculture, Joann Smith. It was a call that led to hundred of millions of dollars for Beef Products Inc., the makers of pink slime.
Today, the meat types fought back.
Meatingplace.com disputed Custer’s claims that the product isn’t muscle but connective tissue. “But connective tissue isn't red. Any redness (or pink, in this case) is associated with myoglobin — meaning it's of muscle origin.”
It’s pink so it’s meat.
“We actually have equipment in place specifically designed to remove any sinew, cartilage, or connective tissue that may come in with raw materials, just like the companies that take trim and produce ground beef,” Rich Jochum, BPI’s corporate administrator told Meatingplace. “Our finished product is typically 94 percent lean.”
Ammonium hydroxide isn’t the only intervention. Cargill uses citric acid, just one of several alternatives to treat what it calls finely textured beef (FTB) to reduce the pathogen load.
The product is included in approximately 70 percent of all ground beef products, Cargill spokesman Mike Martin told Meatingplace.
Food-grade ammonium hydroxide is also commonly used as a direct food additive in baked goods, cheeses and chocolates.
Carl doesn’t have much to worry about if the best proponents can come up with is the tired but continually tested, change-the-language-change-the-mind strategy: lean, finely textured beef (LFTB) just isn't as catchy as pink slime.
Industry types, if you’re proud of your product for its bacterial-reducing capabilities, promote it, reclaim and own the term pink slime; market it.
Instead it’ll be like the genetic engineering types who spent a fortune in the 1990s learning that the term genetic engineering scares people, so it’s better to call it biotechnology. The spokethingies will go to risk communication seminars, learn to express empathy, but still wear $1,000 Italian leather loafers (the douchebags don’t wear socks) and have sweaters tied around their neck for that common-man look (on sale now at J.C. Penny), all while trying to convince the masses of the virtues of lean finely textured ground beef.
That cull dairy cow has gone through the pink slime barn door.
The Mail Online reports Oliver has been criticized by health inspectors after a string of customers and staff suffered food poisoning at two of his Italian restaurants.
The TV chef came under fire when inspectors uncovered a catalogue of food safety failings at his chain of Jamie's Italian eateries.
Two customers at the Reading branch were struck down with the potentially-fatal norovirus after eating dodgy shellfish.
Staff and customers were also struck down with suspected food poisoning at his restaurant in Cambridge.
The chef - named 967th in the Sunday Times Rich List with a personal fortune of £65 million - proudly boasts he is 'passionate' about good food 'no matter what'.
But inspectors threatened legal action when they discovered undercooked burgers were being served to customers at the Leeds restaurant.
Staff at his Guildford restaurant were also criticised for exposing customers to the harmful E. coli bacteria.
The failures were uncovered after inspectors carried out unannounced spot-checks at 11 restaurants between November 2009 and November last year.
Oliver's Ministry of Food website offers a range of tips for a 'clean and safe' kitchen.
But at Jamie's Italian in Cardiff, which serves up to 1,000 people every day, a health inspector warned that careless preparation of uncooked chicken was 'significantly increasing the risk of cross-contamination'.
Peter Berry, PR Manager at Jamie Oliver Limited, said that many of the issues were from over a year ago, adding, “These points are all relatively minor and have not seriously affected the generally excellent EHO ratings which all of the restaurants in the Jamie's Italian collection are proud to display. Jamie's Italian also employs two full-time in-house food safety specialists to ensure the highest standards.”
Thermometers would be a useful kitchen addition. Oliver doesn’t talk about thermometers on TV.
Posted: January 16th, 2009 - 1:32am
by Doug Powell
I have no use for food porn.
I have less use for alleged food celebrities who cross-contaminate everything they touch and don’t know shit about how to determine if they’ve cooked the shit out of their meat.
Use a digital, tip-sensitive thermometer next time.