pastafarian
Well-known member
Now let's imagine that you've ordered yourself a curry from your favourite local curry house, and it turns out after you've eaten it that what you thought was lamb is actually some of that dog shit from the woods sourced from there because it's cheaper. You cool with that?
Wouldn't even cross my mind that curry houses were substituting lamb for dog shit. Has this practice ever happened apart from in your imagination.
I suspect if i was presented with dog shit instead of lamb i would notice immediately and it isnt something that would need to be pointed out to me after i had already eaten it.
Your wife's cooking must be appalling.
But popping a bit of rat shit in your mouth is fine
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-trump-food-hygiene-standards-trade-department-memo-a9145971.html
The US Food and Drug Administration decides the extent to which food products sold to consumers can contain contaminants including rodent hair, animal faeces, insect fragments and maggots.
For example, cocoa beans are allowed to contain up to 10mg of mammal faeces per pound, while ground paprika can contain up to 75 insect fragments and 11 rodent hairs per pound.
The UK does not currently allow any such contamination.
Extracts from Full Fact article
https://fullfact.org/health/maggot-orange-juice-USA/
Claim
In the United States there are acceptable levels of rat hair in paprika and maggots in orange juice.
Conclusion
The US Food and Drug Administration sets levels of natural contaminants in food (like maggots in orange juice) above which it takes automatic enforcement action.
In certain areas of food hygiene the US has less stringent rules than the EU and after Brexit the UK could move towards lower food safety standards as part of a trade deal with the US.
But illustrating this by claiming that these particular contaminants are “allowed” in the US—and implying that they’re not in the UK—is a misreading of the facts.
These levels are the limits at which point the US requires mandatory enforcement action to be taken against food manufacturers. Action can also be taken against manufacturers if the amount of contaminants in their food falls below these levels. There are no similar enforceable limits on levels of contaminants like this within the EU.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) defines levels of contaminants in certain foodstuffs, above which it automatically takes enforcement action. It says that contamination below these levels “pose no inherent hazard to health”.
But describing these limits as “acceptable levels” is not a fully accurate description of what these levels represent.
The FDA says: “It is incorrect to assume that because the FDA has an established defect action level for a food commodity, the food manufacturer need only stay just below that level.
“The levels represent limits at which FDA will regard the food product "adulterated"; and subject to enforcement action.”
The FDA also says: “Poor manufacturing practices may result in enforcement action without regard to the action level.”
So essentially, if food is contaminated below those levels, enforcement action can still be taken against poor manufacturing practices. Above those levels enforcement action is mandatory
But there are no limits in the UK or EU on what level of contamination warrants enforcement action, so implying that the level in the UK is zero is wrong.
It may also be worth noting that, from figs to food colouring, many of us end up eating insect material by choice anyway.