Friday, January 21, 2011

An update to the previous post..

I looked at all of the packs of cold cuts in my local Loblaws store here in London Ontario. Apart from two, Maple Leafs Natural Selections and a Presidents Choice Prosciutto, all of the other packs of ham, salami and similar products produced by:

  • Ziggy’s
  • Piller’s
  • Mastro
  • President’s Choice
  • Schneider’s

contained the following preservatives:

  • Sodium Phospate
  • Salt
  • Carageenan
  • Sodium Ascorbate
  • Sodium Nitrate

You might think that the contents of the packages came off the same productions lines and were just packaged according to which retailer was going to sell them. There may well be some truth in this, but I do not know for sure.

What I do know is this. We are eating all kinds of crap.

Now for a question.

If Sodium Phosphate is a substitute for Sodium Nitrate, why do both sodium types appear in the SAME foodstuffs?

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Food of this type should not hurt..

After a course of antibiotics for a Bronchitis infection, my mouth has become fairly sensitive to some food stuff. I am taking medication to get over it but progress is slow. So I have to look for something to eat that is mild.

Oh dear. Marmite and East Indian dishes are off, as are fries which have been lightly coated with salt and vinegar. Bread-crumbed stuff will have to go as the crumbs will get into the corners of my mouth and irritate it. My favourite Rye bread will have to go on the back burner too. What a dilemma.

I know. I will have plain bread buttered toast and some Black Forest Ham, but without the English mustard which I always use on ham.

Big mistake. The buttered toast is fine but what the hell is in this ham? Well, apart from Pork, there is added salt and three types of Sodium preservative, unknown spices and colour fixer. Dammit, I have been giving my grand-daughter this stuff, but no more. Black Forest ham shouldn’t have this effect. My mouth and lips feel like they are on fire.

One of the ‘ingredients’, according to a website, has side effects which include swelling of the lips, tongue and mouth parts. Another is considered to be a carcinogenic. One of the Sodium products is used as an alternative to Sodium Nitrite, and yet both Sodium products are in there.

The same ingredients appear in the entire range of ham products from this one particular manufacturer, and they all have the same effect on me.

Are these people in cahoots with the medical professions, ensuring a steady queue of people who will need treatments for which the drug companies will fleece them?

I will be writing to the manufacturer and will report back on what they say. Stay tuned.. 

Monday, January 17, 2011

They call the process ‘plumping’

What they do is inject salt water into large chunks of meat, and the result is a nice piece of meat which feels springy to the touch, more tender. It can be done with any kind of meat, by the way.
Take a scrawny, aging chicken, put it out of its misery, pluck it, inject it and hey presto, one nice looking chicken, ready to be wrapped and sold as fresh. Nice job. Do the same with a side of bacon too. Turn it into good, succulent looking slices.
How do you tell that meat has been plumped? That’s easy.
When you cook the chicken, what looked like it could feed four people can now only reasonably feed three. Yes, it shrank as the injected water evaporated out during the cooking period. The only way to ensure that it doesn’t shrink too much is to seal the outside of the chicken in a sauté pan before committing it to a roasting dish, It helps seal in the salt water.
And the bacon? When you opened the pack, did it drip water out all over the counter top? That is some of the salt water, forced out by compression of the packs in their packing boxes. The longer that the bacon sits in transit, the more water will come out when the pack is opened. The rest comes out in the pan.
You may have struggled to fit the pieces of bacon into the pan at the start of cooking, but see how it has all shrunk to under half the surface area. The water has all but left the bacon, but much of the salt will most likely remain. One thing that you do not want to do is add more salt before eating.
So, how do you feel about this practice? Paying for an illusion, water that will evaporate before you get to serve the meat up to your family? Be happy in the knowledge that it may not have been your cooking methods which caused the Sunday roast to shrivel beyond all recognition.
Blame the scammers, the unscrupulous meat producers who will do anything to ensure that their profits stay high..