purple.alien.giraffe
Executive Chef
Very well "said" Chief.
So what you're saying is, long winds aren't neccesarily bad winds.
Very well "said" Chief.
So what you're saying is, long winds aren't neccesarily bad winds.
Very well "said" Chief.
WOW, it never occured to me to read the ingredients on the meat labels. I guess I better start. I don't want meat that has been injected with saline.
So I had occasion to buy a chicken today. Looked at Walmart and Krogers.. there was no chicken available that didn't have at least a 12% solution of brine.
So my 4.71 pound chicken had 12% brine added, that's .57 pounds of brine.
I paid 99 cents a pound, so the Tyson company made 56 cents on that brine solution.
Multiply that by a few millions of chickens, and that is quite a profit margin.
Kinda like the tail fat that is now left on chickens.. that probably added a few million to the bottom line too.
Instead of injecting, why don't they just brine them to improve flavor? Could it be that brining won't increase the weight? And why can't they offer a choice of injected and non-injected?
I know where you live.
Seeeeeya; Chief Longwind of the North
Something is wrong in the UP of Michigan.
The Chief (neither Goodweed or Longwind) has NEVER put up a post with just five words. Five hundred words, yes. Five words, never.
I think the poster is an imposter. Send out a search party.
Hang in there Chief. We're coming to save you.
Sadly, a similar technique is used these days to make mass-produced bacon and ham. I really had to search hard to find a shop selling dry-cured bacon when I moved here. Traditionally cured bacon and ham take time which the big manufacturers don't want to spend. And, of course, with modern refrigeration the preserving aspect of the old style curing is no longer necessary.This is driving me crazy and I wonder if anyone else has a problem with it. More and more I go to the supermarkets and find meat - pork, chicken, turkey, maybe beef but I haven't checked, that has been injected with a saline "enhancement" solution for "better flavor" and "moister meat". I HATE IT! It completely changes the taste of the meat for the worse and it's purely to plump up the meat with water so it will weigh more and cost more. It's just greed. And now that few supermarkets do their own butchering, there is often no choice but the pumped up ones. I had to go to Whole Foods and pay their high prices just to get an uninjected pork roast. It's bad enough that they've bred all the flavor out of most meats - now this! It's hard for me to understand that there has been no outcry over this practice. I told the Safeway Meat Manager that I we going elsewhere to buy the roast because all of his were adulterated.
Good butchers and butcher shops seem to have gone the way of the dodo bird or I would take my business to them. I'm looking for a good one now that isn't 20 miles away.
Anybody else have a problem with this practice?