Pink Slime is the slang term for the beef by-products LFTB (lean finely textured beef) and BLBT (boneless lean beef trimmings); these are mostly connective tissue removed from beef fat trimmings by heating and centrifugal extraction. Therefore the product cannot be marketed as "meat."
It is a regulated additive to meat products, but has been banned from foods in many areas of Europe, and opposed by consumers in many countries. When sterilized by using ammonia, the product is not legally usable in Canada.
Another slang term for the product is soylent pink (referencing the dystopian movie Soylent Green, where deceased humans are made into food that is ostensibly made from plankton).
Shop Rite customer service says their ground beef does not contain lean beef trimmings (pink slime).
Pink slime is processed ground beef that has most of the fat removed with ammonia. Since it is made from ground beef, its safe to assume that it isn't in chicken mcnuggets.
No, they have never used it in their ground beef.
Pink slime was a substance used in McDonald's beef burgers but is no longer used. There is no equivalent used in ground turkey.
Yes
"Pink slime" is beef trimmings. Once only used in dog food and cooking oil, the trimmings are now sprayed with ammonia so they are safe to eat and added to most ground beef as a cheaper filler.
Smith's = Kroger's. Therefore you can google pink slime + Kroger and get the answer to your question about pink slime. My memory is that you are safe with Laura Lean ground beef and Private Selection ground beefs.
No, it is only beef that has pink slime. It is usually in cheap school lunches too.
They do, but they also offer many brands in all stores that do not contain pink slime. Kroger has the following products: -Private Selection Angus Ground Chuck, Gourmet Angus Patties, and Angus Ground Sirloin. -Laura's Lean Ground Beef -Private Selection All Natural Ground Beef sold in a 1-lb. package. 80% Lean and 90% Lean. -Private Selection Organic Ground Beef in a 1-lb. package. 85% lean. -Store-made ground beef from store trimmings prepared in store.
Taken From the Lowell Sun: Tewksbury-based Demoulas Supermarkets Inc., which has about 65 Market Basket stores in the region, decided last week to stop replenishing its stock of "pink slime" products, said David McLean, Market Basket operations manager. Even though there's been no food-safety recall of the product, "we have customers that have concerns and we want them to be satisfied," he said.
Pink slime is a meat byproduct created by separating lean beef scraps from fat using a centrifuge. The scraps are then treated with ammonia to kill bacteria, rinsed, and formed into a paste used as a filler in ground beef products. Despite being approved by the USDA as safe for consumption, pink slime has faced controversy due to concerns about its processing methods.
According to a press release from RRGB, they have never purchased or served any beef with "pink slime".