More Chinese "food".

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Victoria

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Report: Cardboard main ingredient in steamed buns sold as Beijing street food

BEIJING (AP) - Chopped cardboard, softened with an industrial chemical and made tasty with pork flavouring, is a main ingredient in batches of steamed buns sold in one Beijing neighbourhood, state television said.

The report, aired late Wednesday on China Central Television, highlights the country's problems with food safety despite government efforts to improve the situation.

Countless small, often illegally run operations exist across China and make money cutting corners by using inexpensive ingredients or unsavoury substitutes. They are almost impossible to regulate.

China Central Television's undercover investigation features the shirtless, shorts-clad maker of the buns, called baozi, explaining the contents of the product sold in Beijing's sprawling Chaoyang district.

Baozi are a common snack in China, with an outer skin made from wheat or rice flour and a filling of sliced pork. Cooked by steaming in immense bamboo baskets, they are similar to but usually much bigger than the dumplings found on dim sum menus familiar to many North Americans.

In the Chinese television report, a hidden camera follows a man, whose face is not shown, into a ramshackle building where steamers are filled with the fluffy white buns.

The surroundings are filthy, with water puddles and piles of old furniture and cardboard on the ground.

"What's in the recipe?" the reporter asks. "Six to four," the man says.

"You mean 60 per cent cardboard? What is the other 40 per cent?" asks the reporter. "Fatty meat," the man replies.

The bun maker and his assistants then give a demonstration on how the product is made.

Squares of cardboard picked from the ground are first soaked to a pulp in a plastic basin of caustic soda - a chemical base commonly used in manufacturing paper and soap - then chopped into tiny morsels with a cleaver. Fatty pork and powdered seasoning are stirred in.

Soon, steaming servings of the buns appear on-screen. The reporter takes a bite.

"This baozi filling is kind of tough. Not much taste," he says. "Can other people taste the difference?"

"Most people can't. It fools the average person," the maker says. "I don't eat them myself."

The police eventually show up and shut down the operation.
 
I think I'm going to hurl. They pick the cardboard up off the dirty floor, soak it in chemicals and then mix it with fat and serve it? I don't even want to know where the "fatty meat" comes from. And I thought getting your food spit in for being nasty to the wait staff was bad. ICK!
 
This must be how melamine got into the pet food made in China...They must feel that they have way more people than they need so they want to slim out the herd....
 
Okay, I have to admit that I love Chinese food - probably eat it at least once weekly. Do we think this happens in our "civilized" area of the world, or am I going to be able to get my Moo Goo Gai Pan this weekend?

tracy
 
GAWK! (is that a word??)

What I want to know is who, who, who came up with the recipe???
 
Tracy I think we're fine with N.A. Chinese food. We do have controls over here.

GAWK is a great word!

As for who, who know, who cares... this drek is being served up over there. Can you imagine dining there during the Olympics?


V
 
Ewww...Ewwww...AND EWWWWW !!!!!!!!!
That is just SO SAD and EWWWWWWWWW>>>>>>>>>>>>
V.... love ya to bits...but lady,,yer scaring the jeebers outta me!
Just saw an ad with Pamela Anderson re- KFC///////////////////is there gonna be anything other than celery left that we can eat with a--a clear concience .........eewwwwwwwwwwwwww???
my mind boggles....(and people wonder why I drink!!)
toooooo much.
As always...great post V.......... can we follow the prodigal daughters
adventures again soon??
hugs and smiles and en francais...pas de cardboard!
jeannie
 
Well I've heard the crack dealers in big cities have a recipe for it using Ora-Jel and gasoline, for what that's worth.
 
:) Good to see you here Jon.

Jeannie... I don't eat KFC. Haven't for years and years. It's gross. Plus I tend to buy free range eggs and chickens.

Alana is saving up for her next adventure to Antarctica, Padagonia, the Easter Islands... oh and a normal place, New Zealand. ;)

She bought a laptop (Mac). She has all her pics and World's Most Dangerous Road ride all uploaded. They are amazing.

Actually she and I have a couple of mini adventures for this summer. First our long awaited balloon ride is scheduled for August 15th at sunrise. I can hardly wait for that one! Then in September she and I are going hiking at Cypress Lake. That's my September goal. I'll be in good shape to keep up, if not lead the way. ;) We will be eating a healthier fare than what's being offered in some areas of the planet.

V
 
Tracy I think we're fine with N.A. Chinese food. We do have controls over here.

GAWK is a great word!

As for who, who know, who cares... this drek is being served up over there. Can you imagine dining there during the Olympics?


V

Hate to break it to ya . . . but if you think that our "controls" have a lot of effect on imported foods . . . then I've got a bridge in the middle of New York City that I'd love to sell to you. Wake up! The chances are pretty good that you're eating similar or worse right now and right here!

Niether you, I, nor our government has any way of knowing or controlling what herbicides or insecticides are used on agricultural crops which are grown and processed outside of our borders. Nor do we have any way of knowing or controlling what antibiotics, steroids, and other products banned for use in the USA are routinely fed to or injected in the animals that are processed for food and imported to our country. We don't have FDA inspectors on the farms or in the processing plants where this food is prepared and packaged before it is shipped to our country like we have in this country. "Protection" from foreign contaminants in this country is little more than "lip service" whenever something shows up in the press about the problem. And that's not too often.

It's not just a Chinese problem, either. We're getting vegetables, meats, fruits, juices, and their by-products imported from South American countries and Mexico on a daily basis which have been exposed to all kinds of things which are totally illegal in our country. Can you say "DDT"? Or do you even remember what this pesticide is? Have you actually looked at an orange juice container lately? If you have, you know there's not much on the grocer shelves that is labeled as American.

The imports from China are not just Chinese foods. They're a big grower and processor of frozen vegetables as well as lots of other things that many of us routinely assume originated in America. They also ship a lot of pre-cooked and baked goods. So read labels and ask questions before you buy.

We all need to wake up and start reading the labels on foods to determine their country of origin before we routinely accept that they're safe to put on our family's plates. We need to made this a regular practice while we still can. These countries and their lobbyists are very concerned that we're going to awake from our stupidity. That's why there's a huge (but very quiet) move afoot in Congress and the FDA right now to do away with any requirement that foods originating outside of this country require any country of origin labeling.

Don't take my word for it. Do some research and start firing off phone calls and e-mails to your lawmakers before it's too late. We need to know where our foods originate. We need to know that producers of all foods that are allowed to be imported meet the same requirements that their American counterparts are required to meet. And last, but not least, we need to have the foods tariffed to a level that puts them on equal footing with the cost of producing them in this country if we're to save our farm and food industries.

I could teach an entire college course on the disaster that food and other imports are setting our wonderful coutry up for. But that's another whole story. And there's just not room for it here.

Get your heads out of the sand and the "boob tube". Start researching the imports and trade treaty problems in places where you can get accurate and real information. Stop accepting the word of media sources who're only telling you just what their sponsors and owners want you to hear. Wake up. Be aware. And start raising h--- until our lawmakers who have obviously (and often admittedly) been "bought and paid for" by foreign lobbyists start representing us and our interests again.
 
hcflorist.

you are RIGHT ON!

Human sewage is a popular fertilizer in many countries - most untreated
 
Which is why I DON'T buy anything that doesn't have everything listed... I buy local and organic.

When I'm out I order salads...

V
 
Hey V!

Hey Victoria if you can check out Linwood Barclay in the Toronto Star today if you can it features some multiple choice questions that are being asked of a potential quality control inspector in China. It's good for a hoot especially the one about what not to put into pet food.
D
 
Including your own!!!!

Don't you know it. I know of one LOCAL farmer who fertilized his soy beans and corn with human waste. It made me sick. I don't eat corn to this day. This may sound really funny but I would rather eat food that has been fertilized with cow poo than people poo. Okay, I think I'm going on a liquid diet from now on, thanks :)
 
Sludge

you might want to add asparagus and potatoes to that list.
Some may say "whats the big deal"?? The big deal is that we are talking sewage waste, everything industrial, commercial and residential, everything from paint to antibiotics to toxic chemical cleaning products end up in sewers and they can not eliminate all of the above before they spread it on your vegetables. It's really sick and it makes no sense at all. Didn't the governement realize that throwing sewage into the waters wasn't doing our eco system any good? Now what happens when a potato farmer Joe uses "sludge" and it ends right back in our rivers and lakes when it rains? AAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHH!!! k, im getting upset now, time to go to my cave.

Buy local and organic!
 
Buy local and organic![/QUOTE]

I'm finding more and more people here are doing just that... they have many concerns about the unknown quality of food stuffs from unknown and unmonitored areas of the planet. I see them reading the labels, not just for nutritional info but for sources and web addresses so they can investigate further.

V
 
And now... let's play "TURN THE TABLES!"

V


China claims U.S. meat imports tainted By ANITA CHANG, Associated Press

BEIJING - China has suspended imports from several major U.S. meat processors, the latest indication the government may be retaliating as its products are turned back from overseas because of safety concerns.

Frozen poultry products from Tyson Foods Inc., the world's largest meat processor, were found to be contaminated with salmonella, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said on its Web site Friday.

The agency said other imports barred by China included frozen chicken feet from Sanderson Farms, Inc. found to tainted with residue of an anti-parasite drug, as well as frozen pork ribs from Cargill Meat Solutions Corp. containing a leanness-enhancing feed additive.

A spokesman for Cargill denied the agency's claims, while officials at Tyson and Sanderson Farms were not immediately available to comment.

China's food and drug-safety record has come under scrutiny in recent months following the deaths of cats and dogs in the United States and Canada blamed on tainted Chinese pet food ingredients. Worries at home and around the world have heightened as a growing number of Chinese products are found tainted with dangerous levels of toxins and chemicals.

Beijing has taken significant steps in recent days to clean up its product safety record, including executing the former head of its drug regulation agency for taking bribes, and banning the use of a chemical found in antifreeze in the production of toothpaste.

Officials also have vowed to better integrate its fractured regulatory system, which currently splits responsibility among at least six agencies. The blurred lines often enable the country's countless illegal operations to escape detection.

As China works to improve its food safety conditions, authorities also have prominently announced rejections of imports, apparently to turn the tables on critics and show it is not the only country with food export safety problems.

It was not clear whether the latest import bans covered only the products in question or if they extended to all of the companies' imports. A duty officer at the AQSIQ on Saturday said he did not know any details.

Mark Klein, a spokesman for Minneapolis-based Cargill Inc., disputed the Chinese inspectors' findings and said the company hoped to resolve the issue by working with U.S. and Chinese officials.

"We're proud of our products and our processes, and we'll be delighted to talk about them with all concerned," he said.

Cargill is the parent company of Wichita, Kansas-based Cargill Meat Solutions Corp., the second-largest beef processor in the U.S.

Messages seeking comment were left with two spokesmen for Springdale, Ark.-based Tyson. A voicemail seeking comment was left at Laurel, Miss.-based Sanderson Farms Inc.

Beijing has previously rejected shipments of substandard orange pulp, dried apricots, raisins and health supplements from the U.S.
 
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