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The 9 nastiest things in your supermarket
Think pink slime is gross? Wait 'til you see what other unappetizing secrets lurk within your grocery store.
Thu, Apr 05 2012 at 5:38 PM
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Photo: danieljordahl/Flickr
1. "Pink slime"
The gross factor: The meat industry likes to call it "lean finely textured beef," but after ABC News ran a story on it, the public just called it what it looks like — pink slime, a mixture of waste meat and fatty parts from higher-quality cuts of beef that have had the fat mechanically removed. Afterwards, it's treated with ammonia gas to kill Salmonella and E. coli bacteria. Then it gets added to ground beef as a filler. Food microbiologists and meat producers insist that it's safe, but given the public's reaction to the ABC News report, there's an "ick" factor we just can't overcome. The primary producer of pink slime just announced that it's closing three of the plants where pink slime is produced, and Kroger, Safeway, Food Lion, McDonald's and the National School Lunch Program (among others) have all pulled it from their product offerings.
Eat this instead: Organic ground beef is prohibited from containing pink slime, per National Organic Program standards, so it's your safest bet. If you can't find organic, ask the butcher at your grocery store whether their products contain the gunk.

2. Vet meds in beef
The gross factor: Hankering for a burger? Besides a hefty dose of protein, a 2010 report from the United States Department of Agriculture found your beef could also harbor veterinary drugs like antibiotics, Ivermectin, an animal wormer linked to neurological damage in humans, and Flunixin, an anti-inflammatory that can cause kidney damage, stomach and colon ulcers, and blood in the stool of humans. Still hungry? We didn't think so.
Eat this instead: Look for beef from a local grass-fed beef operation that rotates the animals on fresh grass paddocks regularly, and inquire about medicine use. Typically, cows raised this way are much healthier and require fewer drugs. The meat is also more nutritious, too. If you're in the supermarket, opt for organic meats to avoid veterinary drugs in meat.
Related on Rodale.com: The 15 grossest things in your food

3. Heavy metal oatmeal
The gross factor: Sugary and calorie-laden, those convenient instant-oatmeal packets all have one thing in common. They're sweetened with high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which, according to tests from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, may be contaminated with mercury. The group tested 55 samples of HFCS and found mercury in a third of them at levels three times higher than what the average woman should consume in a day.
Eat this instead: Buy yourself some instant oats, which cook in less time than it takes to microwave a packet of the sugary stuff, and add your own flavorings, like fresh fruit or maple syrup. And buy HFCS-free versions of other foods, as well. The artificial sweetener lurks in seemingly all processed foods.

4. Filthy shrimp
The gross factor: Food safety experts refer to imported shrimp as the dirtiest of the Seafood's Dirty Dozen list, and it's not hard to see why when you consider the common contaminants: Antibiotics, cleaning chemicals used in farmed shrimp pens, residues of toxic pesticides banned in the U.S., and pieces of insects. Less than 2 percent of all imported seafood is inspected — clearly, that's a problem.
Eat this instead: Look for domestic shrimp. Unfortunately, 70 percent of domestic shrimp comes from the Gulf of Mexico, and the recent oil spill may have long-term impacts on its shrimp stocks. But shrimp can be purchased from Texas, the East Coast, Maine and the Carolinas, so you still have options.
Related on Rodale.com: 3 surprising reasons to give up soda

5. MRSA in the meat aisle
The gross factor: Hard-to-treat, antibiotic-resistant infections are no joke. Superbug strains like MRSA are on the rise, infecting 185,000 people — and killing 17,000 people — annually in the U.S. Thought to proliferate on factory farms where antibiotics are overused to boost animal growth, a January 2012 study from Iowa State University found that the dangerous organisms wind up in supermarket meat, too. The dangerous MRSA strain lingered in 7 percent of supermarket pork samples tested. The bacteria die during proper cooking, but improper handling could leave you infected. The spike in superbug infections is largely blamed on antibiotic abuse in factory farms that supply most supermarkets.
Eat this instead: The Iowa state researchers found MRSA in conventional meat and store-bought "antibiotic-free" meat likely contaminated at the processing plant. Search LocalHarvest.org to source meat from small-scale producers who don't use antibiotics or huge processing plants.

6. Pregnancy hormones in a can
The gross factor: Bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical that acts like the hormone estrogen in your body, is used to create the epoxy linings of canned food. What food processors don't tell you is that the chemical was created over 70 years ago as a drug that was intended to promote healthy pregnancies. Though it was never used as a drug, the food industry saw no problem adding this pregnancy drug to a wide range of products, including canned food linings and plastic food containers. "Low levels of BPA exposure has been linked to a wide range of adverse health effects, including abnormal development of reproductive organs, behavior problems in children, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic changes that result in altered insulin levels, which leads to diabetes," says Sarah Janssen, senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council. And its use in canned food is the number one reason why 90 percent of Americans have it in their bodies.
Eat this instead: Look for products in glass bottles or aseptic cartons. Canned food manufacturers are in the process of switching over to BPA-free cans, but because those cans are produced in facilities that also produce BPA-based can linings, there's no way to keep BPA-free cans from becoming contaminated.
Related on Rodale.com: The breast cancer causer in your cabinet

7. Bacteria-infused turkey
The gross factor: Turkey marinated in MRSA? It's true. A 2011 study published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases found that half of the U.S. supermarket meat sampled contain staph bacteria, including potentially lethal MRSA. Turkey was the worst offender: Nearly 80 percent of turkey products samples contain staph bacteria. Pork (42 percent) was next in line in terms of bacterial contamination, followed by chicken (41 percent), and beef (37 percent). Researchers ID the overuse of antibiotics as the culprit.
Eat this instead: If you serve meat for Thanksgiving, invest in an organic, pastured turkey, such as one from Ayrshire Farm in Maryland.

8. Moldy berries
The gross factor: If pregnancy hormones in your canned fruit isn't enough to make you turn to fresh, consider this: The FDA legally allows up to 60 percent of canned or frozen blackberries and raspberries to contain mold. Canned fruit and vegetable juices are allowed to contain up to 15 percent mold.
Eat this instead: Go for fresh! When berries are in season, stock up and freeze them yourself to eat throughout the winter. To freeze them, just spread fruits out on a cookie sheet, set the sheet in your freezer for a few hours, then transfer the berries to a glass jar or other airtight, freezer-safe container.

9. Rocket fuel in lettuce
The gross factor: Lettuce is a great source of antioxidants, and thanks to the great state of California, we can now eat it all year long. However, much of the lettuce grown in California is irrigated with water from the Colorado River. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, Colorado River water is contaminated with low levels of perchlorate, a component of rocket fuel known to harm thyroid function, and that perchlorate can be taken up inside lettuce plants. A separate study from the Environmental Working Group found perchlorate in 50 percent of store-bought winter lettuce samples.
Eat this instead: Perchlorate is hard to avoid, but some of the highest levels in the country have been found in California's agricultural regions. If you eat locally and in season, you can ask your local farmers whether it’s a problem in their irrigation water supply.
Story by Emily Main and Leah Zerbe. This article originally appeared on Rodale.com and is reprinted here with permission.

Click for photo credits
Photo credits:
Vet meds: .:[ Melissa ]:./Flickr
Oatmeal: waitscm/Flickr
Shrimp: lsgcp/Flickr
Meat aisle: Wootang01/Flickr
Cans: Alameda County Community Food Bank/Flickr
Turkey: KWDesigns/Flickr
Berries: byJoeLodge/Flickr
Lettuce: GimmeFood :)/Flickr
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Great new documentary by Gary Null "The War on Health" takes on the corrupt FDA
Yeah--and I hope my govt keeps working to make sure the food my family eats is safe.
Depending on the government to do anything correct is foolish. Most of them are so corrupt and take money from anyone who will give it. They then vote the way that group wants and the public safety is the last thing they are concerned about. Ever heard "Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." That's what happens in every government. They are out for themselves, not us.
Hah... just the notion is pretty funny!
USDA is run by former Corporate Executives who still have vested interests in their former Companies. The USDA is just as corrupt as our current banking system is! Look into it. THEN, look into who is running the FDA.
Buy local. Buy from natural foods stores and farmer's markets. Stay away from processed foods out of a box. Stick with "organic" labels. Eat REAL food! You'll be amazed how good it tastes!!
Don't pin your hopes on "organic" - the rules aren't as all-encompassing as some organic growers would like you to believe. Especially fertilizers.
Anon - absolutely right! As a former QA Mgr for several major companies I can attest the Organic has evolved to a buzzword in terms of certification and found that my audits with those agencies were rarely about accountability or traceability but about what you produced and how to charge for the cert on a sliding scale.
Honest truth - the certification is a window dressing.
BTW: I lost 37 lbs since I stated eating "real food" 18 months ago. I did nothing different but switch. I feel much better, lost weight and enjoy life!
Oh- I did avoid anything containing High Fructose Corn Syrup. At some point I learned to eat foods with less sugar--- it happened "by itself"!
For most of my life I have grown, processed and cooked my own foods including meat and eats. Go back to the older simpler way of life and be healthier for it, and will will your children. My kids seem to be immune to everything, they are in their 20's never had and childhood illnesses, neither have their children.
sorry I meant eggs.
Er, it did! It said avoid other HFCS products. What else can they say?
It does say it - in the last paragraph - that you should not eat other foods with HFCS
Very informative. Thanks for sharing this information. No wonder there are so many sick people. We shouldn't have these kinds of problems in the 21st century. I thought we were better than that. What were our food manufactures thinking. Just making as much money as they could at our expense, our health.
good to know, I shop on Fridays so Im printing this one:)
i give up
@Franca: The term 'pink slime' didn't come from the media. It came from the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service.
Another things to add..."organic" doesn't mean "perfect". The way organic farmers fertilize their products is with manure. The manure has to be spread out and heated to 120 degrees. If that doesn't happen, bacteria grow and then transfers to the product. A study was done and said that a lot of organic foods were more bacteria laden then non organic foods. You have to check.
we're livin till 80. thats old enough for me.
The only reason the public thinks "pink slime" is bad is becuase the media called it "pink slime". It's always been added.
we also used to line all of our pipes with asbestos :P
You've highlighted some very good alternatives. Thanks!
good old water will take care of the crud
that's what happens when governement officials are psychologist.
Their mission is to make everyone sick and dumbed down to as much as possible and Hey when you do get sick, your doctor will say one of the most common saying a doctor has been told to say "it's in your head" or "it's genetics"
this is all apart of the govt's plan of population control!!
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