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Fungus offers alternative to meat
UPI ^
| 12/30/2002 10:00 AM
| unknown
Posted on 12/30/2002 5:17:13 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Must be food for the "clones" the French woman with the bad teeth is making?
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Fungus provides alternative to meat!! At my house all the time, groping in the back of the fridge, "Honey, do we want moldy chili or green hamburger."
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
'Last August, the consumer advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest urged the Food and Drug Administration to remove Quorn products from the U.S. market because it claimed some people were having an allergic reaction to the fungus that included severe vomiting and diarrhea.
Marlow Foods said the claim was spurious. The company acknowledged that a small number of people may have a reaction to Quorn but it maintained that this is far fewer than the number of people who have allergic reactions to fish, soy and milk.'
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Of course, most people are not allergic to real meat - which I still prefer over this new 'fungus among us'.
4
posted on
12/30/2002 5:23:24 PM PST
by
Route66
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Ersatz beef. Shall we choose to become experts of fungal textures?
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
"The Fungus Quorn." Now I have the name of the villain for my novel!
6
posted on
12/30/2002 5:25:01 PM PST
by
Trickyguy
To: Lonesome in Massachussets
At my house all the time, groping in the back of the fridge, "Honey, do we want moldy chili or green hamburger." Just because the dough-nut is green don't assume it is mint flavored.
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Sounds like more food that
Zimbabwe can deny. :)
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Wow how simple...eat fungus for dinner and clean your teeth with X-14.
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Mmmmmm...
Fungusy Goodness...
Measurably better tasting than monkey excrement!
11
posted on
12/30/2002 5:33:10 PM PST
by
DWSUWF
To: Lonesome in Massachussets
That's funny.
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; isthisnickcool
I've eaten a lot of Quorn. It's pretty good. Better than tofu. I like the chicken patties the most; though the lasagna is pretty good, too. So far I've had it in these forms: chicken tenders, ground hamburger , breaded chicken cutlets, breaded chicken patties, and lasagna. As a source of protein, it is excellent. The anti-Quorn folks, headed by those idiots at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, claim that one in 146,000 consumers experience a reaction to Quorn and so the U.S. doesn't need another meat substitute when there are many already on the market, such as the soy-based Gardenburger. Of course, they don't tell you a.) that 1 in 300 consumers of soy products have allergic reactions to soy and b.) that they are joined at the hip to Gardenburger. See Michael Fumento's article called
Quorn Flakes about the CSPI duplicitousness. I went out and bought Quorn just to spite Jacobson at CSPI. I also have friends from England who've used it for quite a while.
13
posted on
12/30/2002 5:34:48 PM PST
by
aruanan
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Sounds yummy
for my tummy
might turn me into mummy
better than being a meat eating bummy
(I feel really stupid tonite...don't know why...it's only Monday)
FMCDH
To: aruanan
Thanks, from your link:
A rigorous five-year FDA approval process doesn't seem particularly "cavalier." Never mind, too, that Quorn has been sold in the UK since 1985 and other European countries since 1991, nor that Marlow says it has sold more than a billion portions.
FDA must feel pretty secure that there will be little problem. They are paranoid about approving even cancer drugs for use only by patients that have been touched by cancer without exhausive trials!
To: Route66
Of course, most people are not allergic to real meat - which I still prefer over this new 'fungus among us'.
1 in 146,000 had an allergic reaction to Quorn. 1 in 300 has an allergic reaction to soy. Quorn's texture is somewhere between chicken and fish. I'd rather eat chicken or fish, but have to limit animal tissue intake due to cholesterol concerns (the same weight of chicken, fish, pork, beef, snake, frog has about the same amount of cholesterol). Since dietary cholesterol can easily be too high given the large amount of animal protein in the diet of most Americans, Quorn can be a healthy means of reducing the amount of dietary cholesterol and at the same time still having something tasty to eat.
16
posted on
12/30/2002 5:42:55 PM PST
by
aruanan
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; Happygal
We've had Quorn in Europe for years. Don't get excited, it's not as great as the lefties would have you believe.
Regards, Ivan
17
posted on
12/30/2002 5:43:08 PM PST
by
MadIvan
To: nothingnew
There is actually a mushroom (or tree shelf fungus or something) that smells exactly like good roast beef. Can't think of the name of it, but found some here on a stump...
To: martin_fierro
I was going to say Soylent Green was the ultimate solution-you beat me to it.I've heard Rats make a tastee meal too......
19
posted on
12/30/2002 5:44:44 PM PST
by
Drippy
To: nothingnew
PS, I have no idea what it tastes like.
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