http://politicalblindspot.org/hambu...mcdonalds-burgers-unfit-for-human-consumption
Hamburger chef Jamie Oliver has won his long-fought battle against one of the largest fast food chains in the world McDonalds. After Oliver showed how McDonalds hamburgers are made, the franchise finally announced that it will change its recipe, and yet there was barely a peep about this in the mainstream, corporate media.
Oliver repeatedly explained to the public, over several years in documentaries, television shows and interviews that the fatty parts of beef are washed in ammonium hydroxide and used in the filling of the burger. Before this process, according to the presenter, the food is deemed unfit for human consumption. According to the chef and hamburger enthusiast, Jamie Oliver, who has undertaken a war against the fast food industry, Basically, were taking a product that would be sold in the cheapest way for dogs, and after this process, is being given to human beings.
Besides the low quality of the meat, the ammonium hydroxide is harmful to health. Oliver famously coined this the the pink slime process.
The fast food you love is worse for you than you thought.
Before you buy that McDonald's burger, you should know its unfit for humans.
Discussion in 'Driver Health' started by joseph1135, Sep 1, 2013.
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somebody told me the cigarette I had before I walked in to MCD's is bad too
poppycock I sayPuppage Thanks this. -
With beef prices so high how else are you going to have a $1 menu? There is some finagling going on somewhere.
I refused to eat McD's after the McRib exposure. Their bread isn't even fit to eat.
Some brands of dog food are more expensive than a can of Ravioli. Go figure! -
I don't eat that garbage. This just solidified my decision not to eat that. Corporate America gone berserk poisoning the food and we have to find out from a burger chef nobody's even heard about. McDonald's must hate the interwebz right now.
Criminey Jade, coastie and Arkansas Frost Thank this. -
How many other fast food chains are using the green slime?
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Good to hear, thanks for the link.
I get tons of coupons for mcdonalds, in the mail.
I forward them all to my exwife..........LGarrison, Charli Girl and joseph1135 Thank this. -
Considering that we as professional drivers are often treated worse than dogs (consider the No Idling Law for example) I think eating McD's is apropos.
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Just another sensational article using misleading phrases and careless references to food processing methods ("ammonium hydroxide" is not the same thing as "ammonia"). The only thing that supposed chef was trying to accomplish with that article is a payday.
Re: pink slime? Parts is parts. If they just called it "beef filler" or the like, it wouldn't sound so nasty and generate as many website views and facebook likes. Truth is that it has a high fat content and tends to make the beef it's added to taste better.
From wikipedia:
vikingswen, Puppage, cbholister and 1 other person Thank this. -
Treated like a dog,eh? That would explain why I'm always trying to lick my......
Last edited: Sep 1, 2013
RedForeman and ghettochild Thank this. -
Top Myths of Pink Slime
The media has been spreading a lot of myths about what pink slime is. The image spreading on the internet is not beef. Read more about the top myths of pink slime below.
Myth 1:
Boneless lean beef trimmings look like pink slime.
Fact:
The photo many media have used to represent pink slime is not boneless lean beef trimmings.
Boneless lean beef trimmings actually looks like this:
Myth 2:
Boneless lean beef trimmings or lean finely textured beef which have recently been called pink slime, are just fillers and not beef at all.
Fact:
As their real names suggest, boneless lean beef trimmings are 100% USDA inspected beef. Imagine trimming fat from a roast or steak. Theres always some meat that is trimmed with the fat. It is this meat, trimmed from the fat, which becomes boneless lean beef trimmings. When you compare the nutrition analysis of this lean beef with 90% lean/10% fat ground beef, they are virtually identical. Thats because boneless lean beef trim is beef period.
Myth 3:
Ground beef produced with boneless lean beef trimmings is less nutritious than other ground beef.
Fact:
A side-by-side comparison of nutrition labels for 90% lean/10% fat ground beef demonstrates this lean beef has substantially identical nutritional value as 90% lean ground beef. Lean ground beef is low in fat and is a good or excellent source of 10 essential nutrients, including protein, iron, zinc and B vitamins.
Myth 4:
Boneless lean beef trimmings are produced from inedible meat.
Fact:
Boneless lean beef trimmings are 100% edible meat. These trimmings are simply the lean beef removed from the meat and fat that is trimmed away when beef is cut into steaks and roasts. The meat in these trimming is nearly impossible to separate with a knife so, historically, this product only could be used in cooked beef products when the fat was cooked and separated for tallow. But now there is a process that separates the fat from the fresh lean beef, and it is this fresh lean beef that can be used in ground meat foods like hamburger and sausages. No process exists that could somehow make an inedible meat edible.
Myth 5:
Dangerous chemicals are added to boneless lean beef trimmings.
Fact:
This is a reference to ammonium hydroxide, essentially ammonia and water, both naturally occurring compounds that have been used to make foods safe since 1974, when the Food and Drug Administration declared it GRAS or Generally Recognized as Safe, the highest safety attribution the agency assigns to compounds. Boneless lean beef trimmings receive a puff of ammonia to eliminate bacteria safely and effectively. When combined with moisture naturally in beef, ammonium hydroxide is formed, which is a naturally occurring compound found in many foods, in our own bodies and the environment. Food safety experts and scientists agree it is an effective way to ensure safer ground beef.
Myth 6:
Food safety advocates are concerned about the safety of boneless lean beef trimmings.
Fact:
Scientists, advocates and plaintiffs lawyers, who in many cases are critical of the beef industry, have all stepped forward to praise Beef Products Inc. and its efforts at food safety.
Myth 7:
Because ammonium hydroxide is an ingredient, ground beef containing boneless lean beef trimmings should be labeled.
Fact:
Ammonium hydroxide is not an ingredient added to the product rather, the product receives a puff of ammonia to eliminate bacteria safely and effectively. When combined with moisture naturally in beef, ammonium hydroxide is formed, which is a naturally occurring compound found in many foods including baked goods, cheese, chocolate, and puddings, in our own bodies and the environment. It is used in the production of each of these foods as a processing aid and not an ingredient, so not on the label of those foods either. It is safe and has been approved by FDA since 1974 and specifically approved for its food safety benefits in beef processing since 2001
Myth 8:
Lean finely textured beef (LFTB) is filler for ground beef.
Fact:
Many in the media have begun to describe Lean Finely Textured Beef (LFTB) as filler for ground beef. This is factually inaccurate. Meat fillers include cereals, legumes, vegetable, roots and tubers, and may not be used in anything carrying the term ground beef due to its standard of identity. On the other hand, LFTB is an end product made from boneless lean beef trimming, the very same beef that is processed into roasts and steaks for retailers and restaurants. These trimmings are simply small pieces of beef with fat attached.
The boneless lean beef trimmings become finely textured using high-technology food processing equipment that resembles a large, high-speed mixing bowl, in which they are warmed to help separate away the fat so that only the beef remains. The result is a high-quality beef product and is at least 90 percent lean.
LFTB is blended into ground beef, which is required by law to be made exclusively from beef. It has not been labeled as a separate ingredient because it is 100 percent beef. It is not an additive or filler. In fact, to label it as anything but beef would raise truth-in-labeling questions.
More at the link:
http://beefisbeef.com/muleshoe, Dipschitt, RedForeman and 5 others Thank this.
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