DailyDirt: Horse, The Other Other Red Meat
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Just when you thought the horse meat scandal in Europe was winding down, it's once again getting media attention as more cases continue to pop up. But is horse meat really that bad? According to people who have (willingly) eaten it, horse meat has been described as being lean, tender, sweet, juicy, like a mix between beef and venison, and better than a really good beef steak. Perhaps beef products in Europe should just come with a label that says: "May contain traces of horse meat." Here are a few more links about horse meat.- Traces of horse meat were found in IKEA's signature meatballs which had been distributed to 21 European countries. Did you know that food sales make up 5% of the Swedish furniture giant's $35.6 billion revenue, and that about 150 million IKEA meatballs are consumed globally? [url]
- Nestle has had to remove two of its pasta products from store shelves in Europe after traces of horse DNA were found in them. In both cases, the amount of horse DNA found in the products was higher than the 1% threshold which the British Food Standards Agency uses as an indicator of adulteration in foods. [url]
- People were up in arms recently when chef Hugue Dufour announced that he was going to serve horse tartare at his restaurant, M. Wells Dinette, in Queens, NY. With all the public opposition, Dufour decided it was best to drop the horse tartare from the menu, because he didn't want to be famous for "scandalizing animal lovers." That's probably for the best, since horse meat (esp. that sourced from the horse racing industry) could contain all sorts of drugs, including phenylbutazone, which is a carcinogen and has been strongly linked to bone marrow and liver problems in humans. [url]
- Here are some fun facts about eating horse meat: During World War II, Americans ate lots of horse meat when beef was scarce; In 723 A.D., Pope Gregory III declared that eating horse meat was a "filthy and abominable" pagan custom; In 2011, President Obama made horse slaughter for human consumption legal again; Until 1985, the Harvard Faculty Club reportedly served horse steaks, prepared "chicken fried" with a mushroom sauce; and apparently, horse meat is a healthier option than beef, since it's high in protein and omega-3 fatty acids, low in fat and cholesterol, and has twice as much iron and Vitamin B. [url]
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Filed Under: contamination, food, food supply, horse, meat
Companies: ikea, nestle
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yum. horsemeat.
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Re: yum. horsemeat.
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Re: yum. horsemeat.
Also no synthetic foods; its poison, really. Or anything treated with chemicals either. Or genetically engineered , including the vast number of plants and animals that we've tinkered with for centuries using selective breeding.
Actually, don't eat anything that's currently or was once alive; lots of people say all life is sacred, and many people could be offended by any living thing you chose to eat.
... Hey, that rock looks tasty and non-offensive...
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Re: Re: yum. horsemeat.
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Sadly, 60% of my fellow Californians disagreed.
http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/California_Proposition_6,_Prohibition_on_Slaughter_of_Horses _for_Human_Consumption_(1998)
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Where did they come from?
If horsemeat is showing up in as many minced meat products as we've been hearing about lately, where did these shady operators get it from?
I mean, surely it's cheaper to raise a cow than to raise a horse (not a farmer/rancher, but I would imagine this statement is true) for meat.
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Horses are useful
Horses may have more offspring than can be raised, needed or cared for, and older horses aren't as useful... I'm speaking strictly from a practical standpoint, that horses are more useful than cows while they are being raised. Using them as food when they aren't makes sense.
I don't see what all the fuss is about overall, as I also wouldn't consider eating horse meat any worse than cow, pig, etc... "There's all sorts of tasty critters in the world." In this day and age when there are so many people to feed, and mounting evidence our excess intake of carbohydrates are pretty bad, anything that allows for other, natural food sources is probably an okay idea.
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Re: Horses are useful
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Re: Where did they come from?
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Perspectives
However, the larger scandal – one involving immense numbers of consumers, i.e. also a question of respect – about this horse meat affair is that it escaped the obligatory controls, which should otherwise have rejected it as unfit for human consumption because it was tainted with substances used in the race horse industry (should be banned too, IMO). There is widespread corruption at work in the veterinary trade all over Europe, and probably elsewhere, insofar as individual veterinarians are expected to control their own customers: to put it mildly, they can only be reluctant to report them.
Few are those that mention the economic backdrop, that is the increasing costs connected with the disposal of refuse – race horse carcasses, in other words.
Interestingly, even before the race horse industry turned up on the front line, the first shots in the blame game were fired at Romania (not the Roma, thank you), where horse-drawn carts in small farmer communities were a common sight until recently. A new law forbidding their presence on highways has been drafted of late, allegedly because they – not reckless driving, of course – were the cause of too many traffic accidents. This, in turn, should have led to an abundance of horse meat on the market. As if the Romanians weren't blamed for all sorts of bas stuff in Europe. I'm glad that this one didn't stick too long on the screen.
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Re: Perspectives
Which is interesting, because the reason horse meat is not considered culturally unacceptable in the west is because Pope Gregory declared it a unacceptable (it was a pagan food). So it's a Catholic, not Protestant thing at root.
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Re: Re: Perspectives
Not sure, actually. It might well be Celtic, all that stuff with horse sacrifices, horse burials etc. Offhand I can't remember if the Celts were in favour of or against eating it. I'd have to do more research to refresh things than I currently have time for (and than this thread would allow for). If the Celts (and possibly other pre-Christian populations like the Germanics and the Slavs) ate it ritually, then the prohibition-turned-taboo would indeed have been Catholic (IX-XIIth centuries) and particularly enforced in those "frontier" lands that centuries later, for completely unrelated economic reasons, were to turn Protestant. I wonder if there is a parallel with the Anglo-Saxon taboo on "toadstools" (some of which which were undoubtedly consumed in ritual contexts).
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Re: Re: Re: Perspectives
Slate has a pretty good discussion of the history of all this (http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/explainer/2011/10/slaughtering_horses_for_meat_is_ banned_in_the_u_s_why_.html). Here's a relevant tidbit:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Perspectives
http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/explainer/2011/10/slaughtering_horses_for_m eat_is_banned_in_the_u_s_why_.html
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Cultural differences
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