Restructured steak

Restructured steak is a catch-all term to describe a class of imitation beef steaks made from smaller pieces of beef fused together by a binding agent. Its development started from the 1970s. Restructured steak is sometimes made using cheaper cuts of beef such as the hind quarter or fore quarter of beef.[1]

Allowed food-grade agents include:

Problems

Oxidation and food poisoning are the two most serious issues generally associated with restructured steak. To reduce the risk of food poisoning, restructured steaks should always be cooked until well-done.

gollark: Not the wildly unintuitive thing of "convert each element to strings, join by commas, concatenate strings".
gollark: It should EITHER be concatentation or zip-and-add or something or JUST ERROR like in a sane language.
gollark: It probably should NOT do the ridiculous stringy thing.
gollark: Do YOU want an HNode™ account‽
gollark: UTF-16 strings, interestingly enough.

References

  1. Toldr, F. (2010). Handbook of Meat Processing. Wiley. p. 399. ISBN 978-0-8138-2096-5. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  2. Kerry, J.P.; Kerry, J.F. (2011). Processed Meats: Improving Safety, Nutrition and Quality. Woodhead Publishing Series in Food Science, Technology and Nutrition. Elsevier Science. p. 271. ISBN 978-0-85709-294-6. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.