Natural

  • Posted: May 24th, 2011 - 11:57am by Doug Powell

    The number one health concern with meat is making sure it’s cooked enough to kill dangerous bacteria, which is something both conventionally and organically produced meats have.

    So says Dr. Dana Hanson, a meat specialist in North Carolina State University's Food Science Department in a piece for WRAL (see below).

    “The end result is a healthy food product in either scenario. To say that one is better or more healthy than the other is, quite frankly, a stretch.”

    There are also debates about animal treatment, environmental concerns and how antibiotics may impact bacteria strains. But those debates are separate from the nutrition and safety of the meat we ultimately eat.

    Those comments were markedly different than those from producers of specialty meats

    Ritchie Roberts of Double R Cattle Services Farm near Hillsborough said,

    “I know that my beef is all grass-fed and handled correctly and is super good and nutritious for you 'cause I know what goes into it. and I have control of that. It boils down to that sense of being able to support maybe a local industry and that's really where the benefits of organic come in.”

    Draft owner Dean Ogan says, “The most important thing for us is to know where it came from, know who produced it, know the process.”

    All worthy objectives -- that have nothing to do with safety.
     

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  • Posted: April 19th, 2010 - 6:37pm by Doug Powell

    I don’t care much for all the attention paid to food safety legislation. The stuff that food buyers, suppliers and service folks do every day goes far beyond the endless and mindless chatter about government.

    So today, when I read that more than 100 food, agricultural, ranching and consumer groups have signed a letter being distributed to all U.S. Senators urging them to adopt amendments introduced by Montana Senator Jon Tester that would exempt small food processors from the expense and regulatory oversight required by the Food Safety and Modernization Act, I thought, yawn.

    The letter says,

    “All of the well-publicized incidents of contamination in recent years – whether in spinach, peppers, or peanuts – occurred in industrialized food supply chains that span national and even international boundaries.”

    Except that spinach was transitional organic. So the grower was trying to cash in on a production system that has nothing to do with food safety.

    “Farmers and processors who sell directly to consumers and end users have a direct relationship with their customers that ensures quality, safety, transparency and accountability.”

    Just because I can shake your hand doesn’t mean I know you washed it before you lovingly put your poop-laden fingers all over that tomato you just picked.

    Yew.

    You serve food, in any form, make it microbiologically safe.

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