USDA Proposes Better Meat Labels
The Food Safety and Inspection Service hopes a new rule will make labels on packaged meats more clear when it comes to added solutions such as injections and marinades.
Courtesy USDA Office of Communications
July 29, 2011
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Packaged meats may soon be relabeled to help the consumer keep track of the additives processors include in the meat, such as salt, water and marinades.
iStockphoto.com/luoman
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WASHINGTON,
D.C. — The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection
Service (FSIS) is proposing a new rule to establish common, easy-to-understand
names for raw meat and poultry products that include injections, marinades, or
have otherwise incorporated added solutions that may not be visible to the
consumer. FSIS has determined that some labels do not clearly identify if a
solution has been added to a raw product to enhance flavor or texture. As a
result, consumers may be purchasing raw meat and poultry products with higher
sodium content than they realize. The agency invites comments on the proposed
rule, which is intended to clarify these products’ labels so consumers can
easily distinguish them from raw meat and poultry that do not contain added
solutions.
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“Consumers
should be able to make an informed choice in the store, which is why we need to
provide clear, informative labels that will help consumers make the best
decisions about feeding their families,” says Under Secretary for Food Safety
Dr. Elisabeth Hagen. “It has become evident that some raw meat and poultry
labels, even those that follow our current guidelines, may not be clear.”
Currently,
raw meat and poultry products that contain added solutions such as water,
teriyaki sauce, salt, or a mixture thereof may have the same name on their
labels as products that do not contain added solutions. For example, a
single-ingredient chicken breast and a chicken breast with added solution both
may be labeled as “chicken breast,” even though one package contains purely
chicken breast and one may be comprised of 60 percent chicken breast and 40
percent solution. While the label of the chicken breast with added solution
must state that it contains solution, consumers may not notice such information
if it is not a part of the product’s name. An example of a product name under
the proposed rule would be: “chicken breast – 40% added solution of water and
teriyaki sauce.”