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Health See other Health Articles Title: These Dishes Are Some of the Biggest Scams in the Food Industry These Dishes Are Some of the Biggest Scams in the Food Industry From chemical-soaked scallops to sushi stuffed with "Ex-Lax fish," these commonly faked foods will have you reconsidering your next meal. Jackson Connor Jul 12, 2016 Purchasing food requires a fair amount of trust on the part of the consumer. Whether its shopping at a grocery store, or going out to eat at a restaurant, Americans have come to expect that the food they want is the food they getright down to the most minute details listed on menus and packaging. But now, in a new book title Real Food Fake Food from the author Larry Olmsted, its become clear that quality control in the food industry is largely an illusion. A shockingly high number of dishes and ingredientseverything from beef, to fish, to oil, to cheeseare being misrepresented by producers in favor of profit margins. And while the phenomenon of fake foods has long been an issue on the global scale, with Interpol seizing roughly 11,000 tons of counterfeit produce back in April, its difficult for Americans to fathom some of the scams acclaimed restaurants are pulling on a daily basis in areas like New York City. Sushi in particular is really bad, Olmsted told the New York Post this week. [Recent studies} put the chances of your getting the white tuna you ordered in the typical New York sushi restaurant at zeroas in never. Fish is indeed one of the main culprits, according to the Post. What sushi restaurants pass off as white tuna is often escolara snake mackerel also known as the Ex-Lax fish, due to the serious intestinal issues it can causeand red snapper is almost always substituted with tilefish or tilapia. While food safety issues often prey on the poor, fraudulent goods are especially prevalent in the upper echelons of society. Gourmet meats, liquors, and cheeses are rife with scams, Olmsted writes. The olive oil business, in particular, appears to be rigged against consumers. Despite the racks of extra-virgin blends touted in supermarkets, most Americans have never tasted real olive oil. Photo: Randy Roberts/Flickr Once someone tries a real extra-virginan adult or child, anybody with taste budstheyll never go back to the fake kind, Grazia DeCarlo, an artisanal farmer, told the Post. Its distinctive, complex, the freshest thing youve ever eaten. It makes you realize how rotten the other stuff isliterally rotten. Beyond olive oil and fish, Olmsted and the Post detail a laundry list of repeat offenders. Scallops are routinely soaked in chemicals, cheap cuts of Wagyu are passed off as $350 plates Kobe beef, 100% Parmesan cheese may contains wood pulp, grass-fed cows are often drugged, and shrimpwell, dont even get Olmsted started on shrimp. I wont buy it, ever, if it is farmed or imported, he writes. The Post notes that China often sneaks banned shrimp into the U.S. by shipping it through Indonesian first. But while Olmsteds findings are stomach-churning, he maintains that all is not hopeless. "The good news is that there is plenty of healthful and delicious Real Food," he writes. "You just have to know where to look. Poster Comment: When I worked concert security, there was a Sushi bar around the corner from one of the venues. I would usually go over there for something to eat before the show got started. It was always good, and since we had some good fresh fish houses in Chicago, I knew it was good sushi. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
Great (i.e. horrible) info. Shrimp horrors make me gladder than ever to be following the OT food laws. But red snapper? Lay it on me -- hate to say it, but it's sensational with Shake and Bake.
I have shrimp ring in fridge. Now if I can eat it before it spoils I will be in hog heaven. We got in on a crawdad boil at the Petro truck wash in Louisiana one time a while back. It was free and you could eat all you wanted. They had corn and potatoes too, but we didn't eat much of that. ;)
#9. To: BTP Holdings (#6)
From the headline I tho't the article would be about fast food etc. Wendy's chicken thing is terrible -- a patty about 1/16" thick, and if there's one speck of actual meat in it per serving, I'm a '57 Chevy.
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