“The media gin up another phony controversy. Product-defamation laws, anyone?,” writes Holman Jenkins in the Wall Street Journal.
“The media gin up another phony controversy. Product-defamation laws, anyone?,” writes Holman Jenkins in the Wall Street Journal.
I like wieners, also known as hot dogs. I always thought they were made from pink slime. The list of ingredients includes beef, pork and chicken, but I’ve never seen discrete parts of these animals in wieners. So I guess I like pink slime.
To ABC and the rest of these self-serving alarmists; Go find something to do!
Eric, not quite. Hot dogs and hamburgers are made from the old fashioned version, trimmings that you can’t use. After you cut up your steaks and chops, you have a good amount of good meat left. This is just like the meat right on the bone of your Thanksgiving turkey or how you have to pick up and gnaw the last bit of meat off a T-bone steak. That was what they used to make ground beef and sausage. Pink Slime takes it one step further, using a centrifuge to get every scrap of meat off the bone. The pieces are so small that it doesn’t hold together, which is why it is aa “slime