It will be more and more common in the years to come unless we adjust what they eat and how the processing is being handled ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
http://www.foodmatters.tv/_webapp_46086 … s_to_AvoidFor fat cows (and fat people) feed them grain, corn and soy. This is what farmers do to increase profits. The end product is meat that is nutritionally inferior. Cows were meant to eat grass. Studies show that grass-fed beef (compared to corn-fed) is higher in important vitamins, minerals and the heart-healthy, anti-inflammatory fats.
Oh yes ... people have died ...Shocking wrote:
This is why you shouldn't watch documentaries and regard them as truth because they're honestly scare mongering over nothing, complete with spoon-feeding you an (ill-informed) opinion. I don't like my steak well done either, but as long as you actually put it on a frying pan all the e coli bacteria inside will die (if there are any).
Common sense tells you not to eat raw hamburgers and other products that go through a similar production process.
We've been feeding our livestock a mix of all sorts of stuff including corn for the last 20 years (if not longer). Noone has died as a result.
You're an idiot.Varegg wrote:
Huh ... the E.Coli is not in the corn ... when the cow eats grass (which it's digestive system is used too) it reduces the risk of E.Coli in the meat by about 80%.Shocking wrote:
huh?
Is there an E. Coli variant I haven't heard of which lives in corn or is it common practice to soak corn in feces prior to feeding it to the cow?
Corn is only used to beef up the animal faster ...
Have you read or seen Food Inc.? ... it's a good start to learn more about an issue like this ... and many other issues about food ...
Hm ... and why is that?Jay wrote:
You're an idiot.Varegg wrote:
Huh ... the E.Coli is not in the corn ... when the cow eats grass (which it's digestive system is used too) it reduces the risk of E.Coli in the meat by about 80%.Shocking wrote:
huh?
Is there an E. Coli variant I haven't heard of which lives in corn or is it common practice to soak corn in feces prior to feeding it to the cow?
Corn is only used to beef up the animal faster ...
Have you read or seen Food Inc.? ... it's a good start to learn more about an issue like this ... and many other issues about food ...
lolololololololololKmar wrote:
http://www.foodmatters.tv/_webapp_46086 … s_to_AvoidFor fat cows (and fat people) feed them grain, corn and soy. This is what farmers do to increase profits. The end product is meat that is nutritionally inferior. Cows were meant to eat grass. Studies show that grass-fed beef (compared to corn-fed) is higher in important vitamins, minerals and the heart-healthy, anti-inflammatory fats.
*Cough*Varegg wrote:
Hm ... and why is that?Jay wrote:
You're an idiot.
List is full of shit as far as I'm concerned (potato farmers don't eat their own potatoes, lol yeah right). All the products in a supermarket go through extensive health and safety checks, you're not going to contract all sorts of diseases if you eat the supermarket brand apples, potatoes or beef/fish (and it's strange to me that they only mention apples and potatoes while ALL the vegetables and many fruits in the supermarket <and local markets> undergo the same treatment with pesticides etc). Concerning canned tomatoes, popcorn and the cheapest brand of milk you can find, yeah, you're not supposed to eat/drink that daily.Kmar wrote:
http://www.foodmatters.tv/_webapp_460865/Top_7_Supermarket_Foods_to_Avoid
Because you watched a movie and assumed you knew what was going on. Corn has nothing to do with e.coli transmission. Cows standing around in foot deep piles of shit in close quarters prior to being slaughtered is what leads to e.coli outbreaks.Varegg wrote:
Hm ... and why is that?Jay wrote:
You're an idiot.Varegg wrote:
Huh ... the E.Coli is not in the corn ... when the cow eats grass (which it's digestive system is used too) it reduces the risk of E.Coli in the meat by about 80%.
Corn is only used to beef up the animal faster ...
Have you read or seen Food Inc.? ... it's a good start to learn more about an issue like this ... and many other issues about food ...
Varegg wrote:
Yes I watched the movie ... and watching it made me more curious and since then I've read much about it that confirms the points raised in the movie ...
Amazing what you can learn reading books, you should try it before you call people that do idiots ...
You read propaganda and you think you're well informed? Please.Varegg wrote:
Yes I watched the movie ... and watching it made me more curious and since then I've read much about it that confirms the points raised in the movie ...
Amazing what you can learn reading books, you should try it before you call people that do idiots ...
One of your links, case closed. They stop there and rant on about environmental effects caused by the fertilizers.Eating a diet of meat from corn-fed animals hasn't been linked to any specific health effects in humans.
Well I reckon that it is, again, common sense that fastfood chains utilize the lowest quality meat/vegetables/food in general. If you make it a regular staple of your diet then ofcourse you're going to suffer from health issues....Jahren and her colleague Rebecca Kraft collected hamburgers, chicken sandwiches and fries from three separate Burger King, McDonald's and Wendy's locations in six U.S. cities
Growing food to feed to animals so they become food is grotesquely inefficient, and a huge source of greenhouse gases and wasted fossil fuels.FEOS wrote:
Cows are herbivores, and corn falls in that category. The problem lies when we start diverting corn from feed stock to ethanol production (then there's subsidies, which is a whole other issue)--it's massively inefficient as a fuel source. The bottomline is that corn is a grain, no different than any other that is used to feed domesticated animals.Varegg wrote:
That's right ... cows are not meant to eat corn but rather grass etc ... and grass eating cows are much less likely to transfer E.Coli bacteria over to humans, a significant difference ...FEOS wrote:
Yes. Domesticated animals. Huge agricultural problem.
Why do you assume what you blindly swallow isn't propaganda?Jay wrote:
You read propaganda and you think you're well informed? Please.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2011-06-14 06:02:43)
How do you know what I read?Jay wrote:
You read propaganda and you think you're well informed? Please.Varegg wrote:
Yes I watched the movie ... and watching it made me more curious and since then I've read much about it that confirms the points raised in the movie ...
Amazing what you can learn reading books, you should try it before you call people that do idiots ...
The fossil-fuels-used-as-fertilizer argument is a non-issue. Recently my brother tried to argue about the impending food crisis doom and gloom (he's really into his organic/biological/global warming thing) stating that we'd run out of fertilizer.Dilbert_X wrote:
and wasted fossil fuels.
Last edited by Shocking (2011-06-14 07:12:37)
Thats not the issue, its the fossil fuels used in farming itself.Shocking wrote:
The fossil-fuels-used-as-fertilizer argument is a non-issue.
And are nowhere near a solution yet? Wow.chemical engineers around the world have been aware of and working on the problem for more than 30 years
Vast majority of which are in fertilizer unless you're bringing the machinery and the fuel used in it into the equation, which you can't do without if you want to mass produce.Dilbert_X wrote:
Thats not the issue, its the fossil fuels used in farming itself.
You're going to need to attach extra facilities to each water purification system, ofcourse there's going to be an energy cost involved, doesn't mean it's not feasible as it's actually a very viable solution economically.Dilbert_X wrote:
As for phosphates, a high proportion of applied phosphates just get washed away, you think you're going to close that loop without an energy cost?
What do you mean nowhere near? Precipitation of phosphor for struvite (recent development) already exists. Doing this also consumes less energy than the current methods of producing fertilizer.Dilbert_X wrote:
And are nowhere near a solution yet? Wow.
Uhh, collecting excrement of an entire city and processing it to then use it on the land is very different from the traditional "throwing poop on the fields" method.Dilbert_X wrote:
'Night soil' has been in use around the world for a while now, AFAIK it hasn't solved world hunger and isn't going to, nor will it power tractors.
I think you missed this.. "Studies show that grass-fed beef (compared to corn-fed) is higher in important vitamins, minerals and the heart-healthy, anti-inflammatory fats."Jay wrote:
lolololololololololKmar wrote:
http://www.foodmatters.tv/_webapp_46086 … s_to_AvoidFor fat cows (and fat people) feed them grain, corn and soy. This is what farmers do to increase profits. The end product is meat that is nutritionally inferior. Cows were meant to eat grass. Studies show that grass-fed beef (compared to corn-fed) is higher in important vitamins, minerals and the heart-healthy, anti-inflammatory fats.
kmar, you're usually better than that. They call it nutritionally inferior because a purely grass fed cow is more lean. So what? If you don't want the fat (which, incidentally, provides the vast, vast majority of the flavor you want in meat) then cut it away.
And, as with all organic food, it's also about double the price and wouldn't sustain today's population levels. This is the cause du jour.
Growing consumer interest in grass-fed beef products has raised a number of questions with regard to the perceived
differences in nutritional quality between grass-fed and grain-fed cattle. Research spanning three decades
suggests that grass-based diets can significantly improve the fatty acid (FA) composition and antioxidant content
of beef, albeit with variable impacts on overall palatability. Grass-based diets have been shown to enhance total
conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) (C18:2) isomers, trans vaccenic acid (TVA) (C18:1 t11), a precursor to CLA, and
omega-3 (n-3) FAs on a g/g fat basis. While the overall concentration of total SFAs is not different between feeding
regimens, grass-finished beef tends toward a higher proportion of cholesterol neutral stearic FA (C18:0), and
less cholesterol-elevating SFAs such as myristic (C14:0) and palmitic (C16:0) FAs. Several studies suggest that grassbased diets elevate precursors for Vitamin A and E, as well as cancer fighting antioxidants such as glutathione (GT) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity as compared to grain-fed contemporaries. Fat conscious consumers will also prefer the overall lower fat content of a grass-fed beef product. However, consumers should be aware that the differences in FA content will also give grass-fed beef a distinct grass flavor and unique cooking qualities that should be considered when making the transition from grain-fed beef. In addition, the fat from grass-finished beef may have a yellowish appearance from the elevated carotenoid content (precursor to Vitamin A). It is also noted that grain-fed beef consumers may achieve similar intakes of both n-3 and CLA through the consumption of higher fat grain-fed portions.