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Natural News
Wednesday, June 12, 2013 by: Ethan A. Huff, staff writer
(NaturalNews)
There appears to be no limit to how far the processed food industry
will go to maximize its profits, even if it means reprocessing animal
meat waste and adding it to completely unrelated foods like ice cream.
This is the latest endeavor by industrial food researchers in Italy,
Belgium, and elsewhere, who are right now developing novel methods to
turn meat industry leftovers into protein-rich powders and slurry for
the factory food industry.
As disgusting as it sounds,
unused muscle tissue, tendons, bones, and other animal byproducts are
loaded with proteins and fats that typically end up in landfills.
According to FoodProcessing.com, up to 50 percent of the animal
weight processed by the meat industry is composted, discarded, or
incinerated. But modern science is hoping to basically recycle this
waste and turn it back into food.
But this so-called
food will not be recognizable as its own entity, at least not in the
traditional sense. All those bones, meat trimmings, and poultry
leftovers can effectively be converted into what the food industry has
dubbed "animal protein hydrolysates." These hydrolysates are basically
liquified or powdered protein and fat blends that can be added to all
sorts of other processed foods to boost their overall nutritional
content.
'Pink slime'-type animal gruel to be added to processed foods
Sure,
various types of hydrolysates are already added to some processed foods
currently on the market. But these hydrolysates are typically made from
plants or milk, while the new animal protein hydrolysates
are derived from actual animal flesh and bone, which puts them in a
whole different league. Hydrolyzed whey protein, for instance, is merely
derived from the whey of animal milk. But animal protein hydrolysates
are essentially ground up and enzymatically processed animal flesh -
recall an image of the infamous "pink slime" and you will get an
accurate idea of what we are talking about here.
"It
appears that the lipid-rich bonanza of 'disused' reject animal bits can
easily be turned into a nutritious gunge, paste or gel of some type,
apparently ideal for pumping by the [hecatombe] into processed foods
such as ice cream," writes Lewis Page facetiously for The Register about the concept.
"Despite
the heroic efforts of the meat biz, in which every particle of jelly
and gristle may be jetwashed out of the spinal column of a dead animal
for later consumption - perhaps in sausage, pie or meat-paste format -
and (as we have lately learned) the odd shortcut may be taken with
respect to any dead horses that might be lying about, nonetheless huge
tonnages of less-attractive meaty nourishment such as guts, eyes,
tendons, cartilage, other connective tissue of various kinds, brains,
hooves, genitals, etc. etc. all tend to go to waste."
Industrial food processors claim reusing animal waste is 'adding value' to food
To
the food industry, though, turning animal waste into food will add
value to foods that might be lacking in nutrition. Belgium-based
Proliver, for example, already manufactures a lined of chicken- and
turkey-based "protein powders" that can apparently be injected into
other meat products and used to thicken or enrich other foods:
http://www.proliver.be/nl/home-1.htm
http://www.proliver.be/nl/home-1.htm
A
Russian company has openly admitted that it plans to use animal protein
hydrolysates to "enrich" ice cream. According to reports, the company,
known as Mobitek-M, has already constructed a manufacturing plant in the
Belgorod region of Russia that is capable of processing one hundred
tons of "functional animal protein" per day.
Sources for this article include:
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