Originally posted by Zigenare
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Reply to: That chlorinated chicken stuff
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Previously on "That chlorinated chicken stuff"
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Originally posted by meridian View Postit’s known that stress on animals before they are slaughtered produces a hormonal reaction.
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@oldGreg I think the chlorination is to stop the food poisoning which would otherwise occur due to the standards of hygiene/welfare earlier in the pipeline.
@meridian - points 3+4 are probably most concerning (to me at least)
@originalPMLast edited by b0redom; 25 September 2019, 10:13.
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostComments like this is why we know you're stupid.
Try and work out why this is a thick statement.
It's not that hard.
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Went to Chick Fil A in America earlier this year - and I am still standing so it cannot be that bad.
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Originally posted by b0redom View PostAs I understand it, there's no health problem with chlorinated washing of chicken. The problem is the reason it's needed is the conditions further down the line, so more to do with animal welfare and preparation procedures.
The big problem is that the Salmonella bacteria is very resilient and chlorine washing doesn't kill 100% and you don't need much to get sick. What remains goes into "shut down" mode still alive, but very hard to detect by industry standard tests. So the still contaminated chicken passes inspections for Salmonella.
You just need to look at the figures to realise the difference between the EU and US. About 100k cases per year in the EU vs. 1.2m in the US.
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Originally posted by b0redom View PostAs I understand it, there's no health problem with chlorinated washing of chicken. The problem is the reason it's needed is the conditions further down the line, so more to do with animal welfare and preparation procedures.
Still, obese, alcoholic gammon probably have other health issues to worry about.
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Originally posted by b0redom View PostAs I understand it, there's no health problem with chlorinated washing of chicken. The problem is the reason it's needed is the conditions further down the line, so more to do with animal welfare and preparation procedures.
- is there a problem or potential risk or long term effect with the ppm volume of chlorine solution that is left behind on the product?
- is there a problem with the protein itself in that it needs a chlorine wash? (You could probably provide relative stats on food poisoning)
- is there a problem with the conditions of slaughter? Do we want chicken pies knowing that the meat sat in a pile of sh1t before it was washed and sold to us?
- is there a problem with the animal welfare? Not just from a namby pamby have-they-had-a-good-life before we eat them perspective, but it’s known that stress on animals before they are slaughtered produces a hormonal reaction.
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Originally posted by b0redom View PostAs I understand it, there's no health problem with chlorinated washing of chicken. The problem is the reason it's needed is the conditions further down the line, so more to do with animal welfare and preparation procedures.
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