We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Meat product made by heating beef trimmings to 42 ℃, centrifuging away melted fat, freezing the remainder to −9 ℃ in a roller press, and exposing it to ammonia or citric acid to disinfect; used as a filler to ground beef in the US; banned in the EU.
Instead, FTBs can avail of the enhancement until the end of next year.
2
FTBs have been a driving force of housing sales over the last decade.
3
In some instances, FTBs are buying houses that require work or even significant renovation.
4
Indeed Dublin estate agent Felicity Fox has noticed more interest from FTBs of late.
5
However, as prices rise, Fox expects interest from FTBs to stretch to outlying suburban areas.
1
Even so, he felt ABC unfairly depicted LFTB.
2
He said BPI lobbied for years to get its LFTB added to ground beef without labels indicating it was there.
3
One of his tweets has become central to BPI's claims that the network falsely stated that LFTB is not meat.
4
Previously, LFTB was not listed as an ingredient: Federal regulators said it was no different than other protein found in ground beef.
5
One issue in dispute in this case: the circumstances around the U.S. Department of Agriculture's approval of using LFTB in the making of ground beef.
1
They have a small stamp on the back that reads: "contains lean finelytexturedbeef."
2
Last spring, Cargill told Reuters, it saw an 80 percent drop in production volume of finelytexturedbeef.
3
Finelytexturedbeef is made by taking the carcass scraps and heating them to separate the fat.
1
They have a small stamp on the back that reads: "contains leanfinelytexturedbeef."
Usage of pink slime in anglès
1
But he added, It looks like pinkslime.
2
In the wake of the reports on "World News with Diane Sawyer," the term " pinkslime" went viral.
3
ABC in a series of reports referred to the product as " pinkslime" 137 times, according to BPI's tally.
4
Even before ABC began airing its " pinkslime" reports, BPI and the ground beef business were coming under closer scrutiny.
5
The company contends that ABC and reporter Jim Avila defamed it by referring to its signature product as " pinkslime" in 2012 broadcasts.
6
The resulting media storm over what critics dubbed " pinkslime" nearly destroyed the product's maker, even though U.S. food safety regulators said it was safe.
7
When the first " pinkslime" broadcast aired last March, Diane Sawyer said "a whistleblower has come forward" to tell the public about the processed beef.
8
But ABC lawyer Dane Butswinkas said " pinkslime" was a common term, used more than 3,800 times in the media prior to ABC's reports.
9
For food safety advocates, the campaign to reject PinkSlime has been wildly successful.