Monday 14 April 2014

11 Food Companies That Won’t Tell You Where Their Meat Comes From

Eating a frozen Tombstone pepperoni pizza is an act of ignorance and bliss — you probably don’t want to think about the animals that pepperoni comes from. But if you decided you did want to know more about the meat in processed foods — even if it took a little research — could you find out? In a BuzzFeed investigation, the answer turned out to nearly always be no.
Companies aren’t legally required to tell consumers who provides them with the meat in their foods. And when BuzzFeed asked 13 companies “Where do you get the meat you put in your products?” naming specific brands of pizza, soup, hot dogs, and frozen meals, only one American company, Applegate, would tell us the name of their supplier. The rest said this:

1. “As a standing practice, we do not normally discuss our sourcing strategies.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter
(This goes for the organic brands too.)

2. “We don’t give out supplier lists.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter
Kraft also said: “As a publicly traded company, we believe our suppliers that help us make our quality Oscar Mayer products are a competitive advantage over other brands. As such, we don’t give out supplier lists. We purchase the meats used in our products rather than raise cattle, pork, or poultry. We require our suppliers to comply will all government regulations and industry guidelines.”

3. [Bellisio Foods did not respond to multiple requests for the names of its suppliers.]

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter

4. “It’s our policy not to provide the names of our vendors, as this is proprietary information.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter
“All beef in our products is processed in USDA-inspected facilities, and the vast majority of this is of domestic origin. All of the chicken we purchase comes from the U.S., and is also processed in USDA-inspected facilities. Some pepperoni contains mechanically separated chicken, which is USDA approved as well … It’s our policy not to provide the names of our vendors, as this is proprietary information.”

5. [Pinnacle Foods Inc. did not respond to multiple requests for the names of its suppliers.]

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter

6. “We do not disclose the names of our suppliers.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter

7. “We don’t disclose supplier names for competitive reasons.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter
“Meat used in ConAgra Foods products is purchased from USDA-approved domestic and import companies … While we don’t disclose supplier names for competitive reasons, we work with many USDA-approved suppliers to meet the variety of needs we have for brands and products.”

8. “We do not disclose any vendor or supplier information to external inquiries.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter

9. “We are not able to disclose our suppliers to outside parties.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter

10. [Hillshire Brands did not respond to multiple requests for the names of its suppliers.]

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter

11. “We do not share supplier names due to competitive reasons.”

BuzzFeed / Chris Ritter
“Campbell sources all of its beef products from USDA-approved suppliers in the U.S. and South America and some of its organic beef is sourced from Australia. The chicken used in our products in the U.S. are raised and processed in the U.S. We do not share supplier names due to competitive reasons.”

This means consumers can know basically nothing about the meat in these products.

Shutterstock
The Grocery Manufacturer’s Association, which represents companies like General Mills, Kraft, and Nestlé, says the source of the meat isn’t relevant because the safety of the meat is controlled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture regulations. “Food manufacturers, just like our government regulators, are focused on the safety of the product, not where it is sourced,” said GMA spokesman Brian Kennedy.
But knowing where your food comes from is now considered a basic principle of healthy eating. Even the USDA has a campaign called “Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food.” And while that specific program is meant to strengthen local and regional food systems and is not aimed at the food giants, the message is, nonetheless, that source matters.
Sourcing relates directly to safety when, for example, Hot Pockets were recalled because one of their sources, Rancho Feeding Corp. slaughterhouse, processed “diseased and unsound” animals. (Rancho Feeding Corp. closed down following the recall and BuzzFeed was unable to reach a representative for comment.) Sourcing can also affect other things consumers may want information about: healthfulness, environmental impact, and the way those animals were treated when alive.
“There are three reasons you should care [where the meat in these processed foods comes from]: the animals, the planet, and your health,” New York Times food columnist Mark Bittman told BuzzFeed.
Several companies BuzzFeed spoke to pointed to the competitive advantage they have by keeping their suppliers a secret. When BuzzFeed next offered to keep the information confidential to help them maintain their competitive advantage, all but two (Applegate and a Canadian company that asked not to be identified) still declined to share the names of their meat suppliers.
Applegate said its turkey comes from a cooperative of farmers in Virginia and Pennsylvania but asked the name not be published “due to the high competition for supply in the natural meat industry.” But by knowing the suppliers, BuzzFeed was able to learn about the Applegate’s meat by visiting the co-op’s website, which says the company raises turkeys in three programs: conventional, antibiotic-free, and organic. When a turkey in the antibiotic-free or organic program gets sick and needs medication, it gets moved into the conventional program. (Applegate said it buys only the organic and antibiotic-free turkeys.) The co-op’s site says that it implemented a program to reduce the phosphorous in its waste water, buys local corn and wheat, and is 100% locally owned by farmers. The website also provides the co-op’s phone number, address of its location, and directions to visit or get more information.
Although many companies pointed to a competitive advantage as a reason to not disclose their suppliers, a 2012 USDA report said that 85% of America’s beef and 65% of its pork are produced by only four processing companies, and more than half of all of our chicken coming from only three. With so few options, the competitive advantage is unclear.
“Consumers think they’re choosing between all these different brand names,” said Chris Leonard, author of The Meat Racket, a new book about the increasingly consolidated American meat system. “But when it traces back to four sources,” he says, those choices don’t really exist.
“Only a few mega-corporations control the entire meat industry so that extra money you’re paying for brands like Oscar Mayer only goes to marketing, not quality,” said Michele Simon, the author of Appetite for Profit: How the Food Industry Undermines Our Health and How to Fight Back. Kraft declined to comment in response to this allegation.
Even though the meat industry is dominated by just a few power players and many practices are standard across the board, experts say there are important differences that could impact the quality of the products they sell.
“Cargill, for many years, resisted using a growth drug for its cattle called Zilmax, whereas Tyson Foods quickly adopted the use of that drug,” Leonard said. Zilmax is banned in many countries, including Russia, China, and the European Union. The company that makes it, Merck & Co., suspended sales in August because of safety and animal welfare concerns; the next month Tyson also “discontinued buying cattle given Zilmax over concerns it could possibly be causing lameness in some cattle delivered to [its] plants.” (Merck declined to comment “on behalf of other companies.”)
None of that information is helpful if consumers don’t know which of those companies supplied that meat in a jar of Prego meat sauce to begin with.
“Another example is that some poultry companies, like Perdue, advertise the fact that they don’t use antibiotics in a lot of their chickens,” Leonard said. “Whereas other companies don’t make those claims, which kind of indicates they might be using more antibiotics.”
The fact that these companies don’t want to show off the unique quality their suppliers provide “is troubling,” Leonard said, “because that’s a really basic source of information that could be important for consumers to know.”
“It’s probably mostly junk, and they don’t want us knowing that,” Bittman said. “They don’t want to admit that it’s commodity meat,” he says. “They probably get it from a variety of places.” And if we actually knew where the meat was coming from and how it was made, Bittman said, “we would be repelled.”
Another possible reason companies don’t answer the question is that they can’t.
Food companies know the sources “to a certain degree,” said Leonard, but “it’s hard to point out for any given pizza box, which [piece of meat] came from which [company].”
GMA spokesperson Kennedy cited a similar issue: “It is also important to understand that the geographic origins of an ingredient can vary for a variety of reasons, including supply or the time of season. That specific origin could fluctuate periodically.”
“That is code for ‘We have no damn clue where our meat comes from at any given time so cannot tell you,’” said Simon.

13 Delicacies That Aren’t Israeli

http://www.buzzfeed.com/rymzz/13-delicacies-that-arent-israeli-o3zg

13 Delicacies That Aren’t Israeli

Cultural appropriation is at least inappropriate. Israel has colonized Palestinian indigenous land and displaced and dispossessed Palestinians. Now it is claiming Palestinian traditions as its own. A buzzfeed article claimed that ‘in Israel hummus flows almost as freely as water’… unfortunately, Israel has ensured that water doesn’t flow freely to Palestinians, now they’re appropriating food too! Many of the dishes that Israelis claim as their own are from the Mediterranean region common to all Arabs as well as Turks, Greeks, Cypriots, Armenians, and Persians. Everyone should enjoy the food the world has to offer, just don’t colonize and appropriate it. posted on
Is indeed a precious gift…thanks to the Arabs of the regions that created it.
Hummus is an Arabic word (حمّص ḥummuṣ) meaning “chickpeas”.

2. Shakshouka

Shakshouka means “a mixture” in Arabic slang. It is a staple of Tunisian, Libyan, Algerian, Moroccan, and Egyptian cuisines.

3. Halumi Cheese

Best known as cypriot cheese, however the word “halumi” stems from the Coptic word for cheese, “halum”, and it is believed to have been eaten in ancient Egypt.

4. Cactus Fruit

Mexico is the largest producer of Opuntia but it also grows in the North Africa and Mediterranean regions.

5. Falafel

Falafel comes from the Arabic word falāfil (فلافل), the plural of filfil (فلفل),
It is an amazing vegetarian/vegan food devoured by all humans but remains indigenous Arabic food!

6. Couscous

A traditional Berber dish. Kouscous is known as ‘the North Africa national dish’ shared by Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Mauritania, Egypt and Libya.
First reference to Kuskus was in the 13th-century North African Cookbook: Kitāb al-tabǐkh fǐ al-Maghrib wa’l-Andalus “The cookbook of the Maghreb and Al-Andalus”.
In the levant, a version of kouscous is called Maftool among Palestinians or Mughrabiyah among Lebanese.

7. Bourekas

Bourekas is the ladino word for Turkish Borek.
Börek has its origins in the Turkish cuisine (cf. Baklava) and is one of its most significant and ancient elements of the Turkish cuisine.
The name comes from the Turkic root ‘bur’ - ‘to twist’.

8. Shawarma

Is the Arabic ‘sandwich’ or ‘wrap’ made of chicken, lamb, or beef that is heated and cut from a rotating spit.
It is usually eaten with tabbouleh, fattoush, taboon, tahini, hummus, and pickled vegetables.
It is similar to Turkish Doner Kebab, Greek Gyros, and Armenian Tarna.

9. Labneh

Labneh is strained yogurt.
It is a traditional food in the Levant, Eastern Mediterranean, Near East, and South Asia, where it is often used in cooking
Labneh is a popular mezze dish and sandwich ingredient and is usually eaten with olive oil and sometimes zaatar.

10. Kibbeh

The Arabic word kubbeh means “ball”. It is a Levantine dish made of burghul (cracked wheat), minced onions and finely ground lean meat.
It can be made into balls and deep fried, eaten raw, or spread into a tray. It is often eaten with yogurt (laban).

11. Shish Taouk

The dish originates from the Middle East, namely Lebanese and Syrian cuisine.
It consists of cubes of chicken that are marinated, then skewered and grilled.
Beef and lamb can also be cooked on skewers in a similar way.

12. Baba Ghanoush

Baba Ghanoush

Baba ghanoush بابا غنوج is a Levantine dish of eggplant (aubergine) mashed and mixed with olive oil and various seasonings.
The Arabic term means “pampered papa”, with reference to its supposed invention by a member of a royal harem.

13. Chocolate-coated marshmallow treats

Chocolate-coated marshmallow treats
 
Chocolate-coated marshmallow treats are produced in different variations with several countries claiming to have invented it or hailing it as their “national confection”. The first chocolate-coated marshmallow treat was created in the early 1800s in Denmark.
The concoction was popular as a homemade sweet in Mandate Palestine in the 1940s, when it was known as Ras El Abed. It entered mass production in 1957. The first manufacturer, the Whitman Company, coined the name Krembo.