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Yummy - 1/20/2012 2:08:08 PM   
Iamsemisweet


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In case you were wondering what was in your chicken McNuggets.  Yes.  Chicken.  Sort of. http://docakilah.wordpress.com/2011/05/11/can-you-guess-what-mcdonald%E2%80%99s-food-item-this-is/

< Message edited by Iamsemisweet -- 1/20/2012 2:10:25 PM >


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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 1:30:39 AM   
shallowdeep


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Or not.

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 8:17:27 AM   
MercTech


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Yep, McNuggets are the bits and pieces left over mechanically formed and breaded.

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 8:26:12 AM   
GreedyTop


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good link, SD.. LOVED that Jamie Oliver video LMAO!!

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 10:10:08 AM   
MasterG2kTR


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Believe it or not....I actually knew that was the process for making them....and before you ask...NO, I never worked fro McD's or any meat processor.

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 10:15:05 AM   
LaTigresse


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It's actually pretty easy to make nuggets at home. AND know what exactly is going into your tummy!

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 12:42:15 PM   
Hippiekinkster


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GreedyTop

good link, SD.. LOVED that Jamie Oliver video LMAO!!

Jamie's a good cook, and knows his craft. I saw that a couple years ago. I haven't eaten fast food in years anyway, and that vid reinforces my convictions (and nausea).

I haven't done a road trip since 2005 or so, but it's just as easy to pick up some apples, bananas, carrots, bagels, what have you, and munch on those, instead of going to a fast chemlab "food" outlet.

I'll bet if I could see auras, the auras of people who live on that shit would look like green/grey moldy rotting meat.

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 3:42:55 PM   
kalikshama


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We are What We Eat

Michael Pollan

If you are what you eat, and especially if you eat industrial food, as 99 percent of Americans do, what you are is "corn."

...Overproduction sooner or later leads to overconsumption, because we’re very good at figuring out how to turn surpluses into inexpensive, portable new products. Our cheap, value-added, portable corn commodity is corn sweetener, specifically high-fructose corn syrup. But we also dispose of overproduction in corn-fed beef, pork, and chicken. And now we're even teaching salmon to eat corn, because there's so much of it to get rid of.

There is a powerful industrial logic at work here, the logic of processing. We discovered that corn is this big, fat packet of starch that can be broken down into almost any basic organic molecules and reassembled as sweeteners and many other food additives. Of the 37 ingredients in chicken nuggets, something like 30 are made, directly or indirectly, from corn.

Now, how do you get people to eat so much of this reengineered surplus corn? That took the ingenuity of American marketing. One example is supersizing. When I was a kid, Coke came in these lovely little eight-ounce glass containers. Today, a 20-ounce container is the standard size for soda. The idea that you could sell soda that way was an invention. It has a history, and you can find the individual responsible, an ingenious movie theater manager named David Wallerstein, who invented the idea of supersizing and sold it to Ray Kroc, founder of McDonald's.

Before you go out and sue McDonald's over the size of your waistline, consider that overproduction of cheap corn is government policy. It's done in the name of the public interest, using our taxpayer dollars. American taxpayers subsidize every bushel of industrial corn produced in this country, at a cost of some four billion dollars a year (out of a total of 19 billion dollars in direct payments to farmers)....

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 3:45:59 PM   
kalikshama


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So What Really Is In A McDonald's Chicken McNugget?

“The ingredients listed in the flyer suggest a lot of thought goes into a nugget, that and a lot of corn. Of the thirty-eight ingredients it takes to make a McNugget, I counted thirteen that can be derived from corn: the corn-fed chicken itself; modified cornstarch (to bind the pulverized chicken meat); mono-, tri-, and diglycerides (emulsifiers, which keep the fats and water from separating); dextrose; lecithin (another emulsifier); chicken broth (to restore some of the flavor that processing leeches out); yellow corn flour and more modified cornstarch (for the batter); cornstarch (a filler); vegetable shortening; partially hydrogenated corn oil; and citric acid as a preservative.

A couple of other plants take part in the nugget: There's some wheat in the batter, and on any given day the hydrogenated oil could come from soybeans, canola, or cotton rather than corn, depending on the market price and availability.

According to the handout, McNuggets also contain several completely synthetic ingredients, quasiedible substances that ultimately come not from a corn or soybean field but form a petroleum refinery or chemical plant. These chemicals are what make modern processed food possible, by keeping the organic materials in them from going bad or looking strange after months in the freezer or on the road.

Listed first are the "leavening agents": sodium aluminum phosphate, mono-calcium phosphate, sodium acid pyrophosphate, and calcium lactate. These are antioxidants added to keep the various animal and vegetable fats involved in a nugget from turning rancid.

Then there are "anti-foaming agents" like dimethylpolysiloxene, added to the cooking oil to keep the starches from binding to air molecules, so as to produce foam during the fry. The problem is evidently grave enough to warrant adding a toxic chemical to the food: According to the Handbook of Food Additives, dimethylpolysiloxene is a suspected carcinogen and an established mutagen, tumorigen, and reproductive effector; it's also flammable.

But perhaps the most alarming ingredient in a Chicken McNugget is tertiary butylhydroquinone, or TBHQ, an antioxidant derived from petroleum that is either sprayed directly on the nugget or the inside of the box it comes in to "help preserve freshness." According to A Consumer's Dictionary of Food Additives, TBHQ is a form of butane (i.e. lighter fluid) the FDA allows processors to use sparingly in our food: It can comprise no more than 0.02 percent of the oil in a nugget.

Which is probably just as well, considering that ingesting a single gram of TBHQ can cause "nausea, vomiting, ringing in the ears, delirium, a sense of suffocation, and collapse." Ingesting five grams of TBHQ can kill.”

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RE: Yummy - 1/21/2012 3:47:47 PM   
kalikshama


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quote:

I haven't eaten fast food in years anyway


I haven't eaten fast food since I watched Food, Inc.

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