Mostly Cloudy
84°
Morris, IL
Mostly Cloudy|Forecast »

Horsing around with beef

Could that be a Filly Cheesesteak that you are about to eat?

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Beef contaminated with horsemeat has sparked a multi-nation controversy in Europe.

It’s no secret that the French have long been galloping gourmet. Gob-bling horsemeat there dates back to the country’s 18th century revolution, when rich folks’ horses began to fill food supply gaps. Today horsemeat is still found in many stores there.

The French’s appetite for it has declined. But party goers in the United Kingdom would be utterly sickened if they discovered they ate horse d’oeuvres.

In fact, that’s pretty much the situation now -- or worse.

Europe’s horsemeat scandal began with traces of horsemeat found in Britain in supplies sold by the grocery giant Tesco. Then Burger King learned that it didn’t have it its way: although no one broke a tooth on a horseshoe while eating a burger, traces of horsemeat were found in the company’s British meat supplied by a company in Ireland. Burger King then bailed on its meat supplier.

And then it got worse.

As more investigations throughout Europe were made — and more news reports made people wonder if their beef maybe tasted a bit suspiciously a mite too sweet — the British Food Standards agency announced that Findus’ Lasagna products contained between 60 and 100 percent horsemeat.

As the scandal now reportedly touched on some 16 European countries, meat plants pointed fingers at other countries, and consumers learned how the meat they eat may be blended with meat from MANY countries.

The emerging conclusion now seemingly is that this wasn’t accident. Horsemeat was allegedly used because it was cheaper. Look for the horsemeat scandal to be a heyday for lawyers in Europe.

Could it happen here? Could someone in Pennsylvania order a sandwich and unknowingly bite into a Filly Cheesesteak?

Oklahoma horsemeat houses hope to get their hoofs in the door to legally sell horsemeat for human consumption. If SB375 passes it would scuttle a law in place since 1963 banning the possession, transportation, sale or consumption of horsemeat.

Another bill, HB1999, wouldn’t repeal the old law, but would allow horsemeat produced in the state to be sold outside of Oklahoma. There is an Internet petition drive to defeat both bills.

Previous Page|1||

Comments

Total Comments
1

View/Add Comments

Most Recent Comment

butcher47 wrote on February 18, 2013 9:09 a.m. ...
have you ever tried horse meat? it's not too bad. you certainly may have consumed it without knowing it if you purchased a burger from a "fast food" chain in the 60's or early 70's. like anything, if it's processed and handled properly, it could be a way to reduce the cost of your next cook-out.

Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all