Friday, January 27, 2012

Would You Like A Side Of Propaganda With That?

I'm still trying to figure out when efficiency and economy became a bad thing.

During the Great Depression, Americans were forced to find ways to make more with less. Fear of another devastating recession led to changes in industry that made businesses more productive and more profitable.  Along the way, improvements were made for worker safety and other concerns.

Animal agriculture was no different from other players in the game.  Livestock owners needed to care well for their animals, since failure to do so would be counter productive. Let's face it, a poorly maintained machine doesn't run well, and a poorly maintained animal doesn't create healthy young, eggs, milk or muscle mass for meat out of thin air.

Urban sprawl and the creation of zoning ordinances codified livestock ownership out of grandma's yard and into far removed rural areas.  Could you imagine what it would be like living in your neighborhood if everyone had their own chickens, dairy cows, beef cattle, swine, or other animals?   I know some of you throw fits when Mrs Murphy's dog barks after 9 pm, so you've come to expect that food production animals belong, well, on a farm.

America's farmers did exactly that and took the production to centralized locations where issues such as noise, odor, and waste could be addressed and leave families free to enjoy their little bedroom communities without a couple of hundred  roosters waking them at the crack of dawn.  Feeds were managed to provide optimum nutrition and quicker market weight gains, meaning more food could be made in less time, and still be affordable and delicious. Housing systems were discussed, researched and implemented in a manner that kept the animals safest from predators, injury from other animals and ability to quickly identify and separate those that were ill.  What's wrong with that?

The more comfortable people got in their cozy homes, the less they understood what it took to bring a meal to the table. And with the advances of the internet, information can be passed between large numbers of individuals at lightening speed. Which is a scary thought if that information is false.

Some people and groups enjoy disbursing misinformation in an effort to manipulate a response. And predictably, the masses follow.   Several times this week I've received postings from friends about "scary foods".  Perhaps you've seen them? In one we're shown food items from a well known fast food chain with the claim that this person's very own doctor set these on the counter, dated them and left them there, where they failed to rot, proving they are not food at all but some insidious replica, perhaps made of plastics.  Funny, I didn't know that so many folks I knew all had the same physician.  In another version, it's a housewife or mother who did this experiment, with the same results; the meat patty and other ingredients remained largely unchanged.

First off I'd love to commend these folks for having the cleanest homes I've ever heard of.  They must have even taken a Swiffer to the food items because there isn't a speck of dust to be seen. Me, I can't come in from walking the dogs without leaving a little trail of dust motes behind me. Outstanding!  Secondly, any mother of a toddler can tell you about the mummified remains of what was once food, home cooked no less, excavated from between the cushions of the couch (and the seams of the high chair, and the side of the refrigerator, and between the range and counters...).   It resembles jerky and that's pretty much what it is. Small, thin, portions rapidly lose moisture and dry out.  Ever enjoy a sun dried tomato? Or Portuguese bacalhau? Open air drying is the oldest preservation method known to man. It's absolutely nothing new and you can find instruction on air drying just about anthing edible on sites such as mothernaturenews.com or homesteading sites.

So I find the assertion  that this food cannot possibly be food because, goodness, it dried out! completely absurd.   When you think about, you will too, but was that your reaction when you saw the photo and read a description sent to you by a friend?

Another photo is allegedly of a product called mechanically separated meat. The story goes that entire carcasses of animals are thrown into the grinder, reduced to a hot pink paste and used in one chain store's chicken nuggets, among other foods.

The gullibility of people I have previously thought to be intelligent astounds me.

Sure, there's a product called mechanically separated meat, and here's where the efficiency issues once again raises it's head.  When you remove the best usable cuts from a carcass, what do you do with the rest? Instead of relegating it to garbage, which raises the price of the products and increases useless waste, processors take the remaining parts (excluding things like fur, feathers, entrails and everything else that was already removed) and grind them.  The mass is pushed through a sieve, removing inedible parts such as bone chips.  The resulting product is then used as a base for formed foods like inexpensive chicken meat patties. It's nutritionally sound, safe and affordable. And no, it isn't hot pink, though it is pinkish. Meat does that you know.

Details can easily be found on Snopes but how many people actually look up and verify what they've just been told? You're already been horrified by an image out of context, edited, altered and then propagandized to the moon and back. And probably already hit "share" to several hundred (or thousands) of your closest virtual friends.

Back before the internet, we used to call this an Urban Legend and it took them a while to circulate. Now, with the touch of a mouse pad, the entire world can read something completely ludicrous before lunch. Twice.

The Snopes page has a short video clip attacked showing how one well known chef recreated the process with household appliances- and the reaction of the participants. It didn't go quite the way he had hoped.  It's worth the four minutes to see how this type of intentional manipulation works, and how it can backfire.

Here at home, I reuse what's left too but I'm forced to do it the old fashioned way.  I add poultry carcasses or bone in meat to a pot with water, onions, garlic, celery, carrots, and spices, bring it to a boil, reduce to a simmer and let it cook down a while. I strain the ingredients and after it's cool enough to touch, manually pick out the good meat and toss it back into the pot with the stock. Back in the days when people actually used their kitchens, we called this SOUP.

Perhaps you've heard of it?

4 comments:

  1. Excellent as usual .. great points and comparisons!

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  2. Thank you for this blog. Hope it is ok, I plan to share this with my friends!

    Have you written about definitions like Natural or Organic or Conventional? Consumer Reports was on a news show on Sunday and while the definitions they gave were accurate, the editorial comments were disturbing with an agenda.

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    1. you're welcome to share it or any other of my posts! :)

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  3. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and opinions and for your appreciation for those of us working everyday to produce safe,affordable food from America's family farms.

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