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Archive for August, 2007

Spam: Love it or hate it?

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spam
I have never understood why there could even be a debate about Spam, but taking my own family as an example, I suppose it should be expected. My family is divided. My Mom and I can’t stand the sight or smell of what looks like, well, Spam. Dad and sisters, on the other hand, absolutely love the stuff, and in fact, will do what I consider an act of utter I-don’t-know-what, eat Spam “raw,” straight out of the can.

I am absolutely intrigued that there has to be a sizeable enough contingent of Spam-lovers that almost 6 billion cans of the processed meat have been produced since its introduction into the world. Inspired by an article by Brad Schleicher and Stephanie Shapiro in the Baltimore Sun last week, I wondered, “Do people who claim to like Spam really like how it tastes? What is it about the stuff that is so appealing? Or even a little bit appealing?”

Schleicher says he loves it. In fact, he describes his first childhood memory of it: “I loved the strong aroma, the rich flavor and the smooth and creamy texture. That moment for me was a lot like the one most kids experience eating their first ice-cream sundaes, except that my food wasn’t a sundae. It happened to be cold processed ham and pork.”

On the other (more sensible, in my opinion) hand, Shapiro hates Spam. She says, “”Spam was the color of the 1950s: preternaturally pink, a slightly speckled flesh tone shared by Caucasians and pigs. When fried, Spam acquired an even more unfortunate hue, kind of like a radioactive tongue.”

So I ask you, dear Slashfood readers, about Spam. Do you love it? Or, do you, like me, hate it?

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[TS] Smithfield Foods Net Soars, But Hormel Profit Tumbles

Smithfield Foods, the world’s biggest hog and turkey producer, reported yesterday that quarterly net income doubled on rising beef and pork sales. Hormel Foods said its profit fell on higher costs to make Spam meat products and bacon bits.

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Virus Spreading Alarm and Deadly Pig Disease in China


Virus experts say Chinese authorities are playing down the impact of the highly infectious virus — believed to be an unusually deadly form of an infection known as blue-ear pig disease.

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[TS] Home Again On the Kitchen Range

Buffalo is finally coming of age as an alternative red meat. But it almost didn’t happen.

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Off the Hoof

Here are some sources for buffalo meat.

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[TS] The Cuts Are the Same, but the Calories Aren’t

Buffalo can be substituted for beef in any recipe.

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[TS] Be Yourselves, Girls, Order The Rib-Eye

The dainty lady who had salad on dates has turned carnivore.

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[TS] Tyson Profit Rises as Turnaround Continues

Tyson Foods Inc., the world’s largest meat processor, reported yesterday a bigger-than-expected profit for its third fiscal quarter and raised its profit forecast for the year as it rebounds from losses last year.

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Without U.S. Rules, Biotech Food Lacks Investors


As U.S. officials get serious about drafting rules for the industry, some scientists and executives say big investors may finally be willing to put up money.

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For Epicures, A New Take On Jerky


Beef jerky has earned a shred of respectability at the E. M. “Manny” Rosenthal Meat Science and Technology Center, at Texas A & M University.

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