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The pen will always be mightier than the sword.
Je suis Charlie

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Standing in the supermarket’s food section aisle you’re confronted with hundreds of different products compounded by the happy proliferation of subcategories. You have a wide choice of grocery items at ...
Animal cruelty is the price we pay for cheap meat. Read our investigative feature.
5 modern diseases grown by factory farming Industrial agriculture is making us sick. The Center for Disease Control (CDC), World Health Organization (WHO), nutritional scientists, and medical professionals warn against the health risks of concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs). There is a near consensus among experts that overuse of antibiotics, crowded and unsanitary livestock conditions, unnatural feed diets, and a lack of diversification are responsible for some serious global health risks. In fact, zoonoses (infectious diseases transferred between species) are a natural part of evolutionary biology.

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Kitchen Wisdom
As many of you know, I sit on an advisory board for Kraft Foods. Our latest project tackled the industry's practice of labeling products with statements such as "use by, best by, sell by, freeze by". What does it all mean? Well, freeze by is pretty obvious, freeze the product by the date indicated. Depending on what it is, it can be frozen for up to 6 months. The others are quite ambiguous at best. Do you throw out food if it's past the date? Is it safe to eat? Can the product be sold after the date? Is the grocery store protecting you and your family? Here are your answers and a few guidelines for keeping your food safe. Use by means exactly what it states. Sometimes you'll see it paired with freeze by. Mostly on poultry products. If you refrigerate your chicken you should use it or freeze it before or on the date indicated on the package. Can you go a few more days? Yes, as long as the product doesn't show signs of deterioration such as an off smell, slimy exterior, color changes etc. Remember to repackage the product if you plan on freezing. Best by means the product will have its optimal flavor when used prior to this date. Does it mean its garbage afterwards. Absolutely not! The product will still be good for quite some time. Depending on how you store it, the flavors may or may not decline over time. Since the manufacturer doesn't know how you'll store or use the product, they want to provide a suggestion for an optimal experience. Throw it out when it starts to show signs of possible contamination. For example, that ketchup bottle with the black crust on the lid - time to hit the trash! Sell by means the manufacturers suggested sell by date to the store. This has nothing to do with the consumer. Manufacturers want to keep products rotating on store shelves. So, products are rounded up by the grocery store and a number of things can occur. They may donate the item, sell it to a jobber where it will end up at your local Big Lots or one of the new grocery chains - Grocery Outlet or The Daily Table, send it back to the manufacturer who may or may not repackage the item for sale once again, or simply throw it into the garbage. Are foods safe to eat after the sell by date? Most definitely! Again, watch for signs of possible contamination, off smells, colors such as pink or yellow within the item, sliminess or things growing on the product. All of these mean throw it out! Keeping food safe isn't difficult, but it does involve acquiring knowledge. We can answer any of your questions. Just send us an email or give us a call. As for grocery stores protecting you and your family? Well, they try their best, but the ultimate responsibility lies with you.
A wealth of experience: Here are our top 10 lessons for entrepreneurs who want to get more out of work and life.

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The United States Food and Drug Administration’s finding that imported spices are a surprisingly potent source of salmonella poisoning has prompted India to change how they are grown and harvested.
Cattle producers want to get rid of new meat labels
By Rob Hotakainen McClatchy Washington Bureau
Posted: Monday, Jul. 22, 2013
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WASHINGTON After surviving years of drought and watching the size of the U.S. cattle herd fall to its lowest level in more than 60 years, Texas cattleman Bob McCan would just as soon steer clear of the U.S. government’s latest meat-labeling rules.
For many U.S. consumers, it’s a popular idea: Label packages to let them know what country the meat comes from.
But with his herd of roughly 4,000 including cattle from Mexico, McCan said there’s no good reason to segregate the animals when he sells them. All it would do, he said, is create hundreds of millions of dollars of extra handling costs that would get passed on, driving up the price at grocery stores.
“We don’t want beef to become a luxury item,” said McCan, a fifth-generation rancher from Victoria, Texas.
McCan, now the president-elect of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, is among a group of cattle producers and meat companies that has sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture for moving ahead in late May with new country-of-origin labeling rules.
In a lawsuit filed July 8 in U.S. District Court in Washington, the groups claim the labels will hurt beef exports and are unconstitutional as “compelled speech” that doesn’t advance a government interest.
Backers of the new rules, who say labeling can be done at a minimal cost, are braced for another battle with cattle producers.
“They’re totally wrong – consumers have the right to know where products are from,” said Joel Joseph, chairman of the Los Angeles-based Made in the USA Foundation, a group that promotes labeling and products manufactured in the United States. “It’s not forced speech. It’s just consumer information, the same kind of information that’s on a label of a new car that says where an engine’s from.”
He offered some advice for McCan: “If he doesn’t want to segregate his cattle, then he shouldn’t get cattle from Mexico.”
McCan said labeling is a marketing issue that should be left to the private sector.
“We’re not anti-labeling at all,” he said. “We just kind of feel like the government doesn’t really need to be in our marketing system. It doesn’t have to be dictated to us.”
Cattle producers aren’t the only unhappy ones.
The new labeling rules also could ignite a trade war with Canada, which is threatening to retaliate. Last month, the Canadian government called the new rules a “protectionist policy” that discriminated against foreign competition. Ottawa said it might respond by imposing tariffs on a long list of products, including pork, fruits and vegetables, pasta, chocolate, cheese, office furniture and many more. The Canadian government fears that its beef exports to the United States would decline under the new rules, with U.S. retailers more likely to reject foreign meat.
Canadian officials immediately complained to the World Trade Organization, but they say it could take more than a year to resolve the case.
As a result, John Masswohl, director of government and international relations for the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, called the new rules a tactic by the U.S. Agriculture Department “to buy themselves another year of discrimination.”
And he predicted that the threat of tariffs will quickly affect U.S. businesses.
“If the market thinks tariffs are coming, businesses make plans to adjust,” Masswohl said. “So my feeling is that if you are a producer of one of the products on that list, your banker might have some issues with your line of credit.”
The issue has become tortuous for the Agriculture Department, which last year got sued by labeling proponents who accused the government of dragging its feet on adopting new rules.
And for consumer groups, labeling has become the issue that never goes away, even though it wins strong backing in polls.
“I thought we were done with it, and all of a sudden it’s still going on,” said Chris Waldrop, director of the Food Policy Institute at the Consumer Federation of America.
But he said industry groups have opposed country-of-origin labeling since it first appeared in Congress’ farm bill more than a decade ago.
“They’ve been trying to delay it ever since,” Waldrop said. “This is just another effort to do that, but the public is not on their side on this. . . . Consumers want more and more information about where their food comes from and how it’s grown, and not less.”
He cited a poll released by the Consumer Federation in May, which found that 90 percent of Americans back mandatory labeling of meat products.
McCan is not convinced.
“They might say they care, but most of them really don’t care what country it comes from. Beef is beef,” he said.
Masswohl said polls are misleading, adding that if consumers are asked only whether they’d like to know the origin of their food, “you’d be hard-pressed to find one who would say ‘no.’” But he said consumers put a higher value on price when they understand that labeling could result in a higher grocery bill. He estimated that the new U.S. rules would cost Canadian cattle producers from $90 to $100 per animal.
Canada and Mexico filed complaints against the U.S. with the World Trade Organization after an expanded labeling law took effect in 2009, alleging that it constituted a barrier to trade. After reviewing the case, the WTO upheld the right of the United States to require labels but said their cost exceeded the benefit and that they were confusing to consumers.
That prompted the USDA to issue its new rules this spring, satisfying a deadline set by the WTO.
Under the new rules, the labels will provide more information, detailing what countries the animals were born in and where they were raised and slaughtered. Officials at the Agriculture Department and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative said the federal government is satisfied that the new rules are legal and comply with the WTO’s concerns.
But critics say the new rules did nothing to end the discrimination, which they say will continue the forced segregation of animals.
“It’s absurd what they did, for them to suggest that they complied,” said Masswohl, whose group is one of eight that filed the lawsuit against the USDA.
Cattle producers say the new rules will be particularly onerous for ranchers and meat companies in border states such as Texas, the nation’s top beef-exporting state.
With his ranch just three hours from the Mexican border, McCan said he has long included cattle from Mexico in his business.
“They’ve been tested and treated for everything under the sun before they come across the river, so they’re clean animals and their health is good,” he said. “And usually they’re just ready to go when we get them. . . . There’s no safety concerns with those cattle coming in from Mexico. If anything, they’re even safer.”
But Joseph, whose Made in the USA Foundation urged the USDA to pass the new rules, said labeling is both a health and safety issue for American consumers, who put more faith in U.S. products.
“You’re getting a better product when you get American goods of any type,” he said. “And concerning food products, you’re getting a safer, cleaner product. Sanitation is better in the United States than it is in Mexico.”
McCan worries that a prolonged labeling spat could sour trade relations with Canada and Mexico. And they’re the top two destinations for U.S. beef exports, which declined by 12 percent worldwide in 2012, compared with the year before, according to the U.S. Meat Export Federation.
“The last thing we really need to be doing is creating some problems with them,” McCan said. “It’s gotten very political, unfortunately.”
Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/07/22/4176182/cattle-producers-want-to-get-rid.html#storylink=cpy
Decadence at best...
Health
Only 5% of Americans Wash Their Hands Right
By Dan Kedmey June 14, 2013
(c) Sean Justicemore articles like this one
95 percent of people wash their hands wrong: Are you one of them? CBS News
Few Wash Hands Properly, Study Finds The New York Times
Study: 95% of People Don't Wash Their Hands 'Correctly' The Atlantic Monthly
In news that’s sure to upset germophobes everywhere, a study from Michigan State University has found that 95% of people do not wash their hands properly.
According to the New York Times, the study’s authors dispatched twelve undercover researchers to public restrooms in a college town in Michigan, where they surreptitiously monitored 3,749 people as they scrubbed, rinsed, or just zipped up their pants and left.
(MORE: Could Hand-washing Boost Your Workplace Productivity?)
The researchers found that for every 100 people observed, only five washed their hands properly, meaning they washed their hands with soap for at least 15 seconds. The Atlantic notes that even this standard falls short of the CDC’s guidelines, which advise a good twenty-second scrub of the hands (front, back, between the fingers and under the nails) or long enough to hum the “Happy Birthday” song twice.
The remaining 95% showed a widespread disregard for the CDC’s, researchers’, or even a typical parent’s daily reminders. Twenty-three percent washed without soap. Another ten percent didn’t wash their hands at all. Men, in particular, could use a refresher course on hygiene. Researchers saw only half of the men reach for the soap dispenser, compared with 79% of women. The authors published their findings in the June issue of the Journal of Environmental Health.
(MORE: How Hand-washing Helps Ease Your Mind)
The results surprised the study’s authors, who had seen much higher rates of hygienic behavior in previous hand-washing studies, according to CBS News. And yes, hand washing does comprise an entire field of study. The CDC notes that the simple act of hand washing is one of the “most effective” things someone can do to prevent the spread of infectious diseases, while the WHO has designated October 15, “Global Handwashing Day,” because, as the organizers note, “the habit of handwashing could save more lives than any single vaccine or medical intervention.”
Summer Fun - Keeping Food Safe
BBQ's, picnics, beach and pool parties, weddings and celebrations of all kinds are upon us. It's summertime! You can't help but feel good when the sun greets you each morning bold and bright. And, you want to stay feeling good when you eat at all of these events. Here are a few helpful hints to help keep your food safe and your tummy happy.Don't cross contaminate. Make sure your work area is clean at all times. Prep fruits and vegetables first. Wash and dry them with paper towels prior to prep. This includes all types of melons. When done prepping, wash your knife, hands, and change out your cutting board.<p> Prep your proteins on a separate cutting board. I believe in rinsing all my proteins, make sure you keep it in the sink, don't splash all over the kitchen. If you do manage to make a mess, clean it up and sanitize the area before proceeding. Dry all proteins with a paper towel and toss the towel immediately, don't place it on the kitchen counter. Once prep is done, wash your hands, sanitize your cutting board, knife and work area.<p> For outdoor events here is the rule of thumb to keep foods safe. Cold foods taken from the refrigerator can be left out with no refrigeration for 6 hours. Make sure the internal temperature does not reach 70 degrees, if it does, throw it out. And, hot foods, which have reached 135 degrees and above, can be left out for 4 hours. After the time limit has expired, the food must be thrown out. Do not consolidate foods, in other words, don't combine the two potato salads on the table into one container. Leave them in their original containers and throw them out after the allotted time. And, most importantly, if you're not sure of something, always throw it out. Don't risk your health or the health of your family and friends. It's better to be safe than sorry. <p> One last tip, create a sanitizing solution for your home by mixing 1 part unscented bleach or white vinegar with 3 parts water in a spray bottle. Leave it on the kitchen counter and use it when you need it. Just an fyi, vinegar will etch your stone counter tops, so unscented bleach is a better option.

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Mastering Technique - Poaching, Simmering, Boiling
Not as easy as it sounds...
A Piece of Cake
Cake Decorating for Beginners