Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables.

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Default All Hunnert at Once (What the Hell)

1 There are many subsidies to the meat industry, but the biggest break
it enjoys by far comes inconspicuously via the federal Animal Welfare
Act, which does not apply to animals raised for food. The states only
minimally take up the legal slack, allowing cruelty and abuse of farm
animals to be the norm. If farmers were forced by law to give their
animals truly humane living quarters, such as spacious environments,
clean surroundings, fresh air, sunlight, and companionship - if it
were illegal simply to administer drugs to animals who would otherwise
die from the conditions they live in - cheap fast food could never
exist. Time and again, the industry fights proposed measures designed
to ameliorate conditions for farm animals, even slightly, because they
would cost it literally pennies more per animal. Ultimately, low
prices have allowed demand to stay high and the industry to grow.
Virtually all of the over 8 billion animals slaughtered for food in
the U.S. every year are the product of a swift-moving assembly-line
system, incorporating dangerous, unprecedented, and unsustainable
methods of efficiency. Farming in the U.S. has been allowed over the
last generation to grow into a grim corporate monstrosity, the scale
of which is hard to comprehend or even to believe.

2 When the Clean Water Act went into effect in 1972, agriculture as a
source of pollution was overlooked. The EPA has identified
agricultural runoff as a primary pollution source for the 60 percent
of rivers and streams considered "impaired." A 1997 Senate report said
that every year, U.S. livestock produce 10,000 pounds of solid manure
for every U.S. citizen (see #22).

3 After reviewing 4,500 scientific studies and papers on the
relationship between cancer and lifestyle, a team of 15 scientists
sponsored by two leading cancer research institutions advised that
those interested in reducing their risk of many types of cancer
consume a diet that is mostly fruits, vegetables, cereals, and
legumes. They declared that up to 40 percent of cancers are
preventable, with diet, physical activity, and body weight appearing
to have a measurable bearing on risk.

4 According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, two-thirds of the world's major fishing grounds and stocks
are now exhausted or seriously depleted. Fishers, using modern
techniques such as sonar, driftnets, bottom-fishing super trawlers,
longlines, and floating refrigerated fish-packing factories, are
ultimately not only putting themselves out of business but rapidly
destroying ocean ecosystems. Early in 1998, 1,600 scientists from
around the world declared that the oceans were in peril. They warned
that swift action is imperative to prevent irreversible environmental
degradation (see #92).

5 The Humane Slaughter Act requires that an animal be rendered
unconscious with one swift application of a stunning device before
slaughter. In today's slaughterhouse this requirement can easily be
violated, thanks to increasingly fast line speeds that result in
animals being cut up while fully conscious. Sped-up conveyor belts
produce more profits for packing plants, but the cost is borne by the
animals and by the laborers who have to work on the petrified
creatures as they fight for their lives. And for birds (not legally
recognized as animals), "humane" preslaughter stunning is not
administered (see #72).

6 Cardiovascular disease and cancer cost the country nearly $500
billion every year. Although smoking, lack of exercise, heredity, and
environmental exposures are other causative factors, these diseases
are inexorably linked to diets high in calories (meat), high in
saturated fat (meat), and low in fiber (meat).

7 It might be easy on your conscience to consume the flesh of a
creature perceived to be stupid, dirty, and brutish. It may be
surprising to some, however, that pigs are highly intelligent. Ask
Professor Stanley Curtis of Pennsylvania State University. He taught
several pigs to understand complex relationships between actions and
objects in order to play video games. Curtis, along with his
colleagues, found pigs to be focused, creative, and innovative, equal
in intelligence to chimps.

8 Conservative industry figures for feed-to-flesh ratios are 7:1 for
cattle, 2.6:1 for pigs, and 2:1 for chickens. Many factors, however,
can influence feed conversion. By virtually all accounts, eating food
derived from animals is wasteful. And when the industry does
accomplish more efficiency, improvements usually come at the expense
of the animals, via genetic tinkering and growth-enhancing drugs.

9 Of the 36 million pounds of antibiotics used annually for all
purposes in the U.S., 70 percent are administered to healthy animals
to make them grow faster on less feed. Though perfectly legal, the
practice is promoting the selection of antibiotic- resistant bacteria.
More and more, these bacteria are causing human illnesses that
physicians are finding difficult and even impossible to treat. The
practice is adding to the general worldwide crisis of drug-resistant
disease.

10 Every year, Americans suffer 76 million illnesses, over 300,000
hospitalizations, and over 5,000 deaths from something they ate. That
something was probably of animal origin. The government's strategy for
controlling dangerous bacteria is to inspect meat during processing -
something it isn't doing well nowadays (see #24). Except in rare
instances, neither the USDA nor the FDA has any regulatory powers on
farms where pathogens originate. With the exception of E. coli
O157:H7, dangerous bacteria are legally considered "inherent" to raw
meat. It's up to consumers to neutralize pathogens with cooking. Two
of the legal ones - campylobacter and salmonella - account for 80
percent of illnesses and 75 percent of deaths from meat and poultry.
One hamburger can contain the meat of 100 different cows from four
different countries. One infected animal can contaminate 16 tons of
beef.

11 Heart disease does not have to be a death sentence or mean a life
of cholesterol-lowering drugs and bypass surgery. By prescribing a
vegetarian diet, regular exercise, and spiritual nourishment for his
heart patients, Dean Ornish, M.D., proved that the progression of this
number-one killer can be halted and even reversed (see #85).

12 Jim Mason and Peter Singer write in their book Animal Factories,
"Instead of hired hands, the factory farmer employs pumps, fans,
switches, slatted or wire floors, and automatic feeding and watering
hardware." As with any other capital- intensive system, managers will
be concerned with the "cost of input and volume of output....The
difference is that in animal factories the product is a living
creature."

13 Eating a plant-based diet guards against disease, first in an
active way, with complex carbohydrates, phytochemicals, antioxidants,
vitamins, minerals, and fiber, then by default: The more plant foods
you eat, the less room you have for the animal foods that clog
arteries with cholesterol, strain kidneys with excess protein, and
burden the heart with saturated fat. The American Dietetic Association
acknowledges a correlation between a vegetarian diet and reduced risk
of coronary-artery disease, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and
certain types of cancer.

14 Meat packing is the most dangerous occupation in the nation.
Workers may be crushed by animals falling off the line. Poultry
workers typically make a single movement up to 20,140 times a day and
suffer repetitive-stress dis-orders at 16 times the national average.
Turnover at plants can be as high as 100 percent per year.

15 With so many fish species on the brink of extinction (see #4),
governments continually try to regulate fishing gear, catch size, and
catch season. But the regulations almost never work. Policing is
expensive. Illegal fishing around the world is estimated to be between
25 and 50 percent of the reported catch. And this does not include
catches from ships that avoid interdiction from patrol boats by
registering with "flag-of-convenience" countries - states that have
not signed on to international fishing treaties that regulate
environmental and labor conventions. These boats, which bring in a
full quarter of the world's fish, are often owned by phantom companies
in the U.S., Europe, or Japan. This legal "pirating" of the seas
doubled during the 1990s.

16 Factory hens today are forced to live in "battery" cages stacked in
rows, four high, by the thousands. Each is confined to about 48 to 86
square inches of space. (This page is 81 square inches.) After months
of confinement, necks are covered with blisters, wings bare, combs
bloody, feet torn. Manure fumes and rotting carcasses force poultry
workers to wear gas masks. When the hens become what the industry
matter-of-factly calls spent, producers truck the mutilated birds -
often long distances - to slaughter, or gas them, or grind them up
while still alive, to be used as feed for the next flock.

17 Campylobacter, which most commonly infects chicken, is the leading
bacterial cause of food-borne illness in the U.S. Infections give
victims cramps, bloody diarrhea, and fever, and lead to death for up
to 800 people in the U.S. each year. A Minnesota Department of Health
study tested a hundred chicken products from processing plants in five
states in 1999 and found an 88 percent contamination rate. Of these,
20 percent were resistant to quinolones, a family of powerful
antibiotics. Scientists blame the resistance on the mid-1990s FDA
approval of two of these drugs for therapeutic use on commercial
chickens (see #9).

18 An English study that compared the diets of 6,115 vegetarians and
5,015 meat eaters for 12 years found that the meatless diet yielded a
40 percent lower risk of cancer and a 20 percent lower risk of dying
from any cause. According to William Castelli, M.D., director of the
famed Framingham Heart Study, vegetarians outlive meat eaters by 3 to
6 years.

19 Half of every butchered cow and a third of every butchered pig
becomes either by-product material or waste. In addition, 920 million
animals die on U.S. factory farms before reaching slaughter. What's an
industry to do with all this death and gore? Call the renderer
straightaway! Recycling, they call it. Lips are exported to Mexico for
taco filling; horns are made into gelatin; other parts are fashioned
into everything from drugs to aphrodisiacs and cosmetics. The rest is
minced, pulverized, and boiled down for more products. Much is dried
to a powder to be mixed into animal feed. There are some regulations:
Since 1997, feeding ruminant-based slaughterhouse by-product to cattle
is illegal (see #63). In 2001, however, the FDA found hundreds of
animal feed producers in violation.

20 Essentially, if a farming practice is established as "accepted,"
"common," "customary," or "normal," no matter how cruel, anticruelty
statutes do not apply. Such a legal environment serves to grant meat
producers carte blanche for the development of still other cruel
practices and technologies. In general, the animal cruelty laws that
do exist are rarely enforced. Fines for violations are negligibly
small, and prosecutors may have to demonstrate that a defendant was in
a particular mental state when a cruel act was committed. Basically,
the meat industry enjoys a privilege unique in the world of law:
Instead of society judging which of its actions should be legal or
illegal, it makes this determination itself. Is there any wonder that
precious little economic loss comes for the benefit of farm animals?

21 Our modern dairy cow lives with an unnaturally swelled and
sensitive udder, is likely never to be allowed out of her stall, is
milked up to three times a day, and is kept pregnant nearly all of her
abbreviated life. Her young are usually taken from her almost
immediately after birth. A cow living in today's modern milk factory
is, as John Robbins puts it in his book Diet for a New America, "bred,
fed, medicated, inseminated, and manipulated to a single purpose -
maximum milk production at minimum cost."

22 Waste from livestock in the U.S. amounts to 130 times that produced
by people (see #2). Every time it rains, excess phosphorous and
nitrogen from the urine and feces seep into our waterways, causing
algal blooms, or red tides. Another result of agricultural runoff has
been the proliferation of dinoflagellates, named for their
characteristic dual flagella, the appendages they use to propel
themselves. In 1991, Pfiesteria piscicida was discovered to be a
particularly nasty variety, with the ability to ambush its prey by
stunning it with a disorienting toxin before sucking its skin off.
This nearly indestructible one-celled creature, or "cell from hell,"
as it soon became known, killed a billion fish during just one
flare-up off North Carolina during the early 1990s. People who come in
contact with the tiny predator often experience memory loss as well as
grotesque sores on their skins. In 1982 there were 22 known species of
harmful dinoflagellates. In 1997 there were over 60.

23 Castration makes bulls much easier to handle. It makes their meat
more marketable also. There are three castration methods, two of which
shut off the blood supply so that the testicles either are reabsorbed
into the animal's body or simply fall away after a couple of weeks. In
a third method, the scrotum is cut so that the testicles can be pulled
out. Anesthesia is rarely given before any of these procedures, and
sometimes operations are botched. One livestock expert advises
would-be emasculators, "Sloppy castration means lower profits."

24 By concealing a camera on his body, an employee of a Rapid City,
South Dakota, slaughterhouse was able to obtain a videotape for
CBS-TV's "48 Hours." The tape showed how a plant with over 300
employees that processes an average of 50 cows per hour with only four
USDA inspectors "keeps the line moving." It showed workers taking
dangerous shortcuts in cleaning up fluid that had broken out of an
abscess from a piece of chuck beef - a severe violation of USDA rules,
which require an extended clean- up procedure. A USDA veterinarian
commented, "I can say from my experience of nine years and in talking
to other food inspectors around the country, this probably goes on on
a daily basis."

25 In 2000, the USDA came out with its official dietary guidelines, as
it does every five years, and as always it told people to eat less
meat. Of course it didn't use those words; when it did, in 1979, the
meat industry sounded such a hue and cry that the U.S. agency quickly
retreated. Reduce "saturated fat and cholesterol" it says now,
something that means almost nothing to most people.

26 A commercial egg-laying hen is kept crammed with four to eight
other birds for life inside a small wire cage. The birds remain
perpetually tortured and frustrated as their eggs fall through the
wire mesh to roll out of reach but not out of sight. Egg laying is
such a personal matter that a hen seeks privacy when performing the
function.

27 The senseless waste of the world's growing meat-centered diet is
illustrated by a hypothetical statement put forth by the Population
Reference Bureau: "If everyone adopted a vegetarian diet and no food
were wasted, current [food] production would theoretically feed 10
billion people, more than the projected population for the year 2050."

28 In 1997 a bird virus jumped to a human for the first time in
history. By early 1998, the avian influenza strain H5N1 had killed six
people as well as entire flocks of chickens in Hong Kong. Fearing that
the strain might be signaling the beginning of a pandemic of human
influenza (see #35), authorities slaughtered and buried 1.3 million
poultry-market chickens in the city over a chaotic three-day period.

29 As gigantic hog-confinement operations dot the nation more and
more, issues of odor impose themselves on entire communities. Fumes
carry 150 volatile compounds that can become airborne on dust
particles. "In the summer, when they start pumping effluent, it wakes
you up. You are gagging," vented one neighbor of a hog factory in a
March 1998 New York Times article.

30 A male calf born to a dairy cow - what does a farmer do with this
by-product of the milk industry? If he is not immediately slaughtered
or factory-raised, he is made into fancy veal. To this end, he is
locked up in a stall and chained by his neck to prevent him from
turning around for his entire life. He is fed a special diet without
iron or roughage. He is injected with antibiotics and hormones to keep
him alive and to make him grow. He is kept in darkness except for
feeding time. The result? A nearly full-grown animal with flesh as
tender and milky-white as a newborn's. The beauty of the system, from
the standpoint of the veal industry, is that meat from today's "crate
veal" still fetches the premium price it always did when such flesh
came only from a baby calf. But now each animal yields much more meat.

31 On October 12, 1999, the population of the world hit 6 billion, at
least in theory. This number is expected to reach 10 billion by 2050.
The Green Revolution, which fueled much of the recent growth, appears
to have come to an end. Indeed, grain production worldwide has been
declining since 1983, and biotech is not likely to reverse the
downturn. Today, 70 percent of grain in the U.S. and 40 percent of
grain worldwide lavishly goes to feed livestock. And just when the
world seems to think it needs more land to cultivate grain to feed to
animals so more people can eat them, per-capita world cropland has
declined by 20 percent in the 1990s alone. The World Health
Organization says 1.2 billion people in the world don't get enough to
eat. Increasing meat production is definitely not the answer.

32 Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are highly toxic chemicals, once
used widely in a number of industrial applications. Though they are
now banned in the U.S. and other Western countries, their residues
have become part of the food chain, lodged in the fat of fish, beef,
pork, milk, and other dairy products. Various studies have linked
prenatal exposure to PCBs - even tiny amounts - to impaired
intellectual development in children. Women who plan to become
pregnant are advised to avoid foods containing them, because the
chemicals can accumulate in their bodies for years.

33 Some farmers feed their chicken flocks manure. No, it's not
illegal, and yes, animals will grow by eating it. According to the
FDA, the practice is safe if, during composting, the feces are allowed
to reach high enough temperatures to destroy harmful bacteria. The
problem is, farmers rarely take all the necessary steps in the
composting process.

34 The late parent advisor Dr. Benjamin Spock maintained that cows'
milk "causes internal blood loss, allergies, and indigestion and
contributes to some cases of childhood diabetes." In the last edition
of his famous baby book he recommended that children after the age of
2 essentially adhere to a vegan diet. But he also believed that dairy
milk was not good for infants. According to renowned nutrition
researcher T. Colin Campbell, "Cows' milk protein may be the single
most significant chemical carcinogen to which humans are exposed."

35 Because of animal agriculture, the world sees a global pandemic of
influenza three or four times per century. Ducks are often the
original incubators for a new subtype. In turn, pigs are periodically
able to act as hosts for both the avian viruses and human ones. Within
the pigs' lungs, the transspecies viruses swap genetic material,
creating a new strain that may be passed back to humans. Historically,
the most fertile place for this to happen has been south China, where
billions of pigs, domesticated ducks, and people all live in close
proximity to one another.

36 Beef cattle are best suited to moist climates, like those of
Europe, where they evolved. But in the U.S., many are concentrated in
the West on the driest land. Native grasses long ago were overrun by
heartier foreign varieties brought here on bovine hooves. Grazing
usually takes place along fragile riparian zones - the strips of land
along rivers and streams where wild species of plants and animals
concentrate and regenerate. These delicate ecosystems, which serve as
natural purifiers of the water, are summarily trampled flat by cows
and contaminated by manure.

37 Adult-onset diabetes is irrefutably linked to fat in the diet.
Researchers have found that when diabetics adhere to a low-fat,
high-fiber, complex-carbohydrate (vegetarian) diet they are often able
to reduce or even eliminate their medication. Tragically, as people
around the world increasingly adopt meat-based diets, incidences of
this disease - which leads to aggressive atherosclerosis, gangrene,
blindness, and kidney failure - rise dramatically.

38 After years of selective breeding and with the help of modern
milking practices, a cow today is robbed of many times the milk her
calf would take. The strain on her body is equivalent to what a human
would experience jogging six hours per day. On the farm of yesteryear,
"Bessie" might have lived 20 years. Today, once her milk-producing
abilities diminish, after about four years, she is slaughtered and
ground to hamburger. In February 1994, the Monsanto company inflicted
yet another horror on our friend: a genetically engineered bovine
hormone that boosts milk production by as much as 40 percent. And this
is an industry that receives government price supports because it
perpetually produces gluts.

39 U.S. subsidies to ranchers on public lands cost American taxpayers
about $500 million annually. To eliminate livestock predators - real
or anticipated - one program uses steel-jaw leghold traps, firearms,
cyanide, and poison gas to exterminate thousands of black bears,
mountain lions, bobcats, foxes, and coyotes every year.

40 Though osteoporosis is a disease of calcium deficiency, it is not
one of low calcium intake. The main cause for the bone disorder is too
much protein in the diet. Excesses can leach calcium from the bones.
The typical meat-eating American is eating about five times as much
protein as needed.

41 Technology can save your life after a heart attack (see #11), but
ultimately you'll have to live with the consequences. In the case of
congestive heart failure - a $19-billion-per-year industry that
involves 550,000 afflicted people every year - your heart is so
damaged that it is unable to circulate blood to the rest of your body
adequately. Often your only hope is to get a transplant, but you'll
have to wait in line for that.

42 An egg farmer, when faced with a flock of spent hens, knows he can
induce them to resume egg production via a forced molt - accomplished
with starvation and water deprivation for periods of up to two weeks.
No U.S. law prevents the regimen, and in fact most hens are molted at
least once in their lives. So cruel is the practice that even
McDonald's couldn't stomach it. In August 2000 the burger giant
announced that it would not purchase eggs from suppliers that employ
the procedure. The dictate was the first from any major U.S. food
company to reflect concern over the treatment of chickens.

43 According to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration,
poultry processors have the worst record for not allowing their
employees to use the toilet when needed on the job. In March 1998, the
agency announced that the abuses were so bad that it would have to
implement explicit directives to protect workers.

44 In any factory-farm operation, a percentage of the animals are sick
or crippled. The industry calls them "downers." Federal law does not
protect them in any way. Downers are dealt with conveniently.
Veterinary care is not wasted on them. If unable to walk, a downer is
often dragged by chain or pushed by a tractor or forklift to
slaughter. Such animals may be left to starve or freeze to death. The
downer phenomenon would be drastically reduced if stockyards refused
to receive and process them.

45 When researchers at Cornell University took on the task of
developing menus for long-term space travel, prolonged and sustainable
life support was their mission. Astronauts not only would have to
prepare their own food; they would have to grow it first. In such
lifeboat conditions, meat and dairy would have to be off the menu. Too
bad not enough people see planet Earth in a similar way! (See #101.)

46 Cattle thrive best on grass and hay. But to give beef its signature
fatty marbling and to speed growth, ranchers fatten cattle with a
high-grain diet. Without the use of antibiotics, the rich feed would
cause abscesses to form on the livers of 75 percent of the animals.
Unfortunately, such routine drug use raises the risk for the
development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (see #9).

47 If you like the idea of being welcome at the places where your food
is produced, don't count on your local poultry grower allowing you to
see his birds anytime soon. Just barely holding onto life in their
drugged-up, overbred, and chronically immunodeficient state, chickens
and turkeys in today's factory systems must be carefully segregated
from the possibility of infection being brought in from the outside.
If even slightly lax in applying rigorous measures of "biosecurity,"
farmers over wide geographic regions can be forced by a mass outbreak
to destroy millions of birds at a time.

48 Animal feces and urine, in today's quantities, need to be
categorized as hazardous industrial waste because of the bacteria,
wormy parasites, and viruses they carry. Fumes can be so potent and
even explosive that a plume can kill a man on the spot. Still, the
most common method of storage for animal waste is an open- air
cesspool (see #69).

49 Eating fish from coral reefs is like burning the Mona Lisa for
kindling. Reefs are the home to 25 percent of all known marine fish
species. Yet a burgeoning demand from restaurants for live coral-reef
fish has created huge incentives for divers to capture the fish with
cyanide. First they dissolve concentrated tablets of the poison into
plastic squirt bottles. Once the prey is stunned, full immobilization
tends not to take place until after the fish have had a chance to
burrow back into the reef. Divers extract their catch with destructive
tools. Some reefs are over a million years old. Yet 20 percent have
been destroyed in just the past two decades.

50 One of the most important things you can eat isn't even a nutrient;
it's fiber. Plant foods, and grains in particular, are replete with
it. Animal muscle has next to none, which is why societies with
meat-based diets have such high incidences of colon cancer. Early
fiber researcher Denis Burkitt, M.D., observed: "The only reason you
have a laxative industry is because you've taken fiber out of your
diet."

51 In 1991 the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine came out
with the New Four Food Groups: fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and
legumes (beans and peas). Meat and dairy are termed "optional," not
considered necessary for good health.

52 Animal agriculture routinely mutilates farm animals for its own
convenience. Animals are branded or ear-notched for identification.
They are debeaked or tail-docked to minimize the destructive effects
of their naturally violent responses to intense confinement. Calves
and piglets are castrated for other economic reasons (see #23). And
perhaps the most abhorrent: Boar bashing is also common.
Justification? Boars with broken noses are less likely to fight.

53 A male chick born with the genes of an egg-laying hen is an
annoying by-product to the industry. Not biologically worthy of
becoming a broiler, and with no law to protect him, he is disposed of
in the least expensive way that hatching operations can devise. Most
commonly, he is thrown into a bag with a thousand other male chicks to
suffocate.

54 Though sometimes considered a panacea for our time, fish farming,
or aquaculture, is even more disruptive to the environment than
fishing the seas. nThe construction of pens along shorelines is a
major reason for the decimation of mangrove forests, where fish
reproduce. nSome fish will not breed in captivity, so fish farmers
must acquire stock from the wild. These species will have less chance
to replenish their numbers in nature. nFarmed fish often escape into
the wild, corrupting the genetic purity of wild species and spreading
disease at the same time. nShrimp are fed on a mashed-up aquatic
protein mix. So-called biomass fishing, used to derive the feed, is
done with fine nets. (Normally, nets are wrought loosely to allow
juvenile fish to escape and reproduce - thus assuring future stocks.)
Biomass fishing extracts fish indiscriminately. The fish that are
caught may be endangered or may be the food on which endangered fish
live. nHuge amounts of nitrogenous waste emanate from fish farms, just
as with all intensive animal agriculture.

55 The continued adoption of high-fat diets in newly affluent nations
around the globe threatens to wreak financial disaster on fragile
developing economies. Without treatment infrastructures in place, the
inevitable need for high-tech therapies puts a strain on national
coffers.

56 A report issued by the National Academy of Sciences in the summer
of 2000 said that 60,000 children are born in the U.S. each year with
neurological problems caused by mercury exposure. Environmental groups
later concluded that the toxic threat of mercury in seafood was
greater than previously thought, especially for children and pregnant
women. Their warning advised that certain ocean fish, not just species
of freshwater fish, should be avoided.

57 Hoof-and-mouth disease is rarely fatal, but for its victims it's
still a death sentence. When blisters form on hooves and lips and when
growth slows because of fever and loss of appetite, it's off to the
abattoir. At press time, over 2 million animals in Great Britain had
been slaughtered and burned. Only about 1,400 were actually sick; the
rest were destroyed to halt the contagion. The pyres of burning
carcasses were found to emit huge amounts of dioxin into the air. The
ultimate disaster, however, could be if wildlife becomes infected.
Wild animals can become long-term or even permanent reservoirs for the
disease.

58 If you want to find a lawless industry, you don't have to look
farther than the people who produce animals foods: Labor,
environmental, and health violations - often of the most unimaginable
varieties - are a regular feature in the trade journals if not the
general press. Occasionally, even a "humane handling" violation comes
before public scrutiny. In February 2000, USA Today broke a
particularly shocking story about two IBP slaughterhouses in Nebraska.
The Justice Department was alleging that IBP emitted up to 1,800
pounds of hydrogen sulfide a day from one of its plants. Some of the
town's people walked around with tanks of oxygen, but most were just
gagging. "It's this progressive loss of brain," explained one expert.
Hydrogen sulfide also corrodes the lungs and destroys a person's
ability to breathe. We learned that IBP had a 20-year history of
environmental misconduct.

59 The efficient mass production of animal bodies for gustatory
purposes is keeping researchers in genetic engineering and cloning
busy. These virtually unpoliceable technologies are threatening to
usher in a brave new feedlot of animal monoculture and cruelty. The
future will bring us perfect-fat-to-lean-ratio designer pigs,
genetically engineered fast-growing fish, prevaccinated chickens, and
more super-milk-producing cows. Josef Mengele would be impressed.

60 In 1982 hamburger sickness - or E. coli O157:H7 poisoning - was
rare. In 1999, the USDA revealed that the deadly strain may infect
half of the cattle that are processed into ground beef. Every year, as
many as 73,500 Americans get sick from E. coli contamination, and 600
die from it. Milder symptoms may range from diarrhea and abdominal
cramps to red-blood-cell destruction. More serious bouts may cause
blindness, seizures, kidney failure, or paralysis, or they may require
partial bowel removal.

61 From the animal-feed breadbasket of the nation's Midwest, massive
amounts of fertilizer, pesticides, and manure runoff travel down the
Mississippi River till they end up in the Gulf of Mexico. This
high-nutrient mix causes an eco-chain reaction that ultimately ends
with microscopic organisms robbing the bottom of the ocean of oxygen.
Animals there need to relocate to more oxygen-rich waters. Slow and
non-mobile species suffocate. The phenomenon is known as hypoxia.
Scientists have dubbed affected areas "dead zones." Once a year the
Gulf's dead zone grows to about the size of New Jersey.

62 In what is still the most comprehensive study of diet and lifestyle
ever made, the China Project found that animal protein is linked to
chronic disease. The findings from this grand epidemiological study
are especially compelling because the data collected allows meaningful
comparisons between populations with similar genetic backgrounds yet
with nonhomogeneous diets and lifestyles.

63 One by one we're hearing of people downed by the very mysterious
new-variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a brain-eating affliction that
experts say is a human version of bovine spongiform encephalopathy
(BSE), or mad cow disease. The 100 or more victims of the
brain-wasting disease since 1986 probably became infected after eating
beef from cows who had been fed brain and nerve tissue of
scrapie-infected sheep. Death from the disease is inevitable, often
prolonged, and thoroughly hideous. Recent evidence confirming the
transspecies link gives credence to the notion that the disease, which
has a 15- to 20-year incubation period, may someday become much more
widespread. Though feeding ruminant remains back to ruminants was made
illegal in the U.S. in 1997, the imprudent practice of recycling
animal parts back to livestock has been going on for decades. It could
be only a matter of time before America suffers its own version of the
English saga, which saw over 200,000 cattle infected with mad cow
disease. That will be something to worry about if it comes. Until
then, it may be a good idea to remember that about 2,600 Americans die
from cardiovascular disease every day. Beef eating has plenty to do
with it, too; there's no mystery about that.

64 Though considered more healthful than beef, fish is still a
high-fat, high-calorie, fiberless food imbued with artery-clogging
cholesterol. It is concentrated with protein (see #62), so it raises
the risk of osteoporosis and kidney problems, and it often is laden
with dangerous toxins absorbed from polluted environments (see #32 and
#56).

65 When researchers installed videocameras in the kitchens of 100
homes to watch meals being prepared by unsuspecting study
participants, it was found that up to 42 percent of the pathogen-
prone meat dishes were undercooked. The meat industry claims that it
doesn't have to provide pathogen-free products, because bacteria are
killed by cooking. Perhaps this policy needs to be reconsidered - or
people need to go vegetarian.

66 From farm to table, animal foods are a filthy business. Antidotes
to the many pathogens they harbor is an ever- burgeoning industry. nOn
the farm, there are ionizing systems to reduce pathogen-laden dust.
nIn the slaughterhouse, there are steam, saline and acidic solutions,
irradiation, ultra- high pressure, competitive exclusion (which adds
benign bacteria to crowd out the lethal kinds), electrolyzed water,
liquid nitrogen, and ozone gas. nIn the supermarket, detection tabs
monitor food temperature. Other detection devices include scat
scanners and fiber-optic pathogen sensors that use vibrating quartz
crystals. nIn the kitchen, a silver-coated cutting board kills food
bacteria. nThen, if you still get sick, you can take a drug to absorb
the toxicity. What'll they think up next!

67 In 1995, a USDA study found that "greater than 99 percent of
broiler carcasses had detectable E. coli." Though in most cases the E.
coli strain was not the deadly one (O157:H7), the finding points to
the unsavory fact that nearly all chicken comes in contact with fecal
matter at least some time during processing.

68 Today the poultry industry is a vertically integrated oligopoly,
meaning that a few giant chicken companies control production, from
chick hatching to grocery-store delivery. Squeezed into the
arrangement is the contract grower. The big company owns the birds;
the grower supplies the labor and the factory confinement hardware.
The situation often appears good to the grower when she signs her
first contract and goes into debt by several hundred thousand dollars.
It's not long before she finds that the multi- billion-dollar
corporation she has contracted with is now calling all the shots, and
that the debt she's incurred has reduced her to little better than
indentured servitude.

69 The passage of local laws favoring massive corporate pork
operations in North Carolina recently propelled the state into the
number-two spot in national hog production. In terms of sewage, twice
the human population of New York City might as well have moved to
North Carolina. University studies estimate that half of the 2,500
open hog-manure cesspools (euphemistically termed "lagoons"), now an
inevitable part of hog production there, are leaking contaminants such
as nitrate into the groundwater. In the summer of 1995, at least five
lagoons broke open (see #48), letting loose tens of millions of
gallons of hog urine and feces into rivers and onto neighboring
farmland. No mechanical method of retrieval exists to clean
contaminants from groundwater; only nature is able to purify things
again. And that can take generations.

70 Between 1984 and 1994 a third of U.S. packinghouses went out of
business thanks to lax enforcement of the antitrust laws.
Consequently, a more powerful industry was able to get faster kill
speeds approved even while the number of line employees was being
reduced. Meat and poultry safety has been suffering ever since. In
1996 alone, USDA regulators made 138,593 "critical" citations against
the country's 6,400 processing plants. Each infraction had the
potential to sicken consumers if the food had been distributed.
Thanks to loopholes in the law, plants were almost always allowed to
continue operating.

71 Turkeys today have been selectively bred to such an extent that
their huge breasts make it impossible for them to accomplish the sex
act on their own. The industry must artificially inseminate them. The
job is nearly as dehumanizing for the workers - who must work rapidly
for long hours and low wages - as it is deplorable for the tortured
breeder birds, who are essentially raped once or twice a week for 12
to 16 months until slaughter.

72 In most large commercial chicken slaughter plants the heads of
doomed birds are first plunged into an electrified brine-water bath.
The electric current is set at a voltage just high enough to
immobilize the birds and to promote bleedout without hemorrhage. The
birds not only are sentient during slaughter, but must suffer the
excruciating shock. The current serves to minimize any inconvenient
flailing that might interfere with the slaughter process.

73 Legally, the term free-range is virtually meaningless. The federal
government has only the vague requirement that the animals from which
such meat is derived have access to the outdoors. This could mean one
small opening for thousands of birds. There is nothing in the law to
prevent these "free-range" animals from the same kind of cruel
treatment imposed on any other factory-farmed animals. In March 1998,
Consumer Reports found free-range poultry actually more contaminated
with salmonella and campylobacter than other poultry.

74 New York State's Department of Environmental Conservation and its
Department of Health put out a flyer called "Eating Sport Fish." The
advice speaks for itself: No one should eat more than one meal of fish
per week from any of the state's fresh waters; chemical contaminants
may be a problem; trim all fat; don't consume cooking liquids. On the
other hand, if you still want to enjoy the "fun" of sport fishing but
don't want to contaminate yourself, the flyer suggests "catch and
release." But don't tear out the hook, "cut its leader." Also avoid
playing fish to exhaustion, the flyer advises.

75 The tiny, mostly impoverished nation of Albania recently became the
setting for an epidemiological study that compared the diets of two
segments of its population. One segment subsists on foods that are
mostly of animal origin; the other enjoys what is today termed the
Mediterranean diet, which consists mainly of fresh fruits and
vegetables, cereals, and olive oil. Death rates were notably higher in
the segment that primarily consumes animal foods. The researchers
announced that the study could well serve as a model for health-policy
planners everywhere.

76 As the trade in meat becomes more global, "carnivore" conflicts
inevitably come to the fore. A recent glaring example was the 2001
hoof-and-mouth disease disaster (see #57), when countries quickly
severed trade with the entire European Union, though the disease was
mostly confined to England. Meanwhile, the hormone-in-beef dispute
between the U.S. and the EU remains a sticking point, and meat safety
standards from nation to nation also continually need to be hashed
out. Furthermore, disagreements over fishing rights regularly bring
nations to the verge of armed conflict: In 1997 the United Nations
reported that over 100 countries were involved in fishing disputes.

77 The population explosion should not be thought of exclusively in
terms of people - not when the combined weight of the world's 1.3
billion domesticated cattle exceeds that of the entire human
population. Cattle disrupt ecosystems over half the world's land mass.
In the past half century alone, more than 60 percent of the world's
rangelands have been damaged by overgrazing, the most pervasive cause
of desertification.

78 Overwhelming evidence has indicted red meat because of its fat
content. Now, this all-American disaster food just got more toxic,
thanks to numerous studies that link its high iron content to heart
disease and atherosclerosis. Iron, it is believed, generates free
radicals - unstable particles that damage cells. It may also interfere
with nitric oxide in the body, a chemical that allows blood to flow
through the blood vessels more freely. New research is also poking
holes in the belief in the heart-protective effects of estrogen in
pre-menopausal women. That protection may be because of the monthly
loss of iron through menstruation.

79 Animal foods are high in sodium, which causes the blood to retain
water. They also cause plaque to build up in the arteries, narrowing
the flow area for blood. Combine these phenomena and you have a recipe
for a disease that afflicts about 50 million Americans: high blood
pressure. You can take calcium channel blockers and diuretics to
control it, but studies warn that you risk losing intellectual
function if you do.

80 In the early twentieth century man learned to extract nitrogen from
the air, cheaply and in large quantities. The discovery has allowed 2
billion more people to inhabit the Earth and given farmers the luxury
of feeding cropland to livestock. Yet what gives the world abundance
has poisoned waterways from the China countryside to the Ohio Valley.
Billions of animals recycle excess nitrogen into the environment with
their manure. Even human sewage has become more nitrogen-rich,
especially with the many more meat eaters that the world can now
support. Waterways in North America and Europe have 20 times the
nitrogen they did before the Industrial Revolution. To produce a gram
of meat you need over 15 grams of nitrogen; to produce a gram of wheat
flour, only 3 grams.

81 Food animals are transported in all weather. When it is brutally
cold, animals may freeze right to the sides of trucks or become frozen
in the urine and feces that build up on truck floors. In hot weather,
heat stress will kill many. Losses, however, are figured into the cost
of doing business. According to swine specialist Kenneth B. Kephart,
"Even with a zero death rate that might be associated with providing
more space on a truck, the hogs that we save would not be enough to
pay for the increased transportation costs of hauling fewer hogs on a
load."

82 When meat, fish, or poultry is barbecued, dripped fat over the open
flame sends up plumes of smoke that coat the food with carcinogens.
Other unhealthful chemicals are created just by extended cooking
times. Chemists are telling meat eaters today to keep those grill
times down. Even environmentalists are saying that restaurant grilling
is a major source of soot and smog. But you still need to cook your
meat thoroughly: How else are you going to kill all of the deadly
bacteria?

83 As a result of the introduction of cattle to this hemisphere, major
forest fires in the American West occur today at the rate of one every
three years, where earlier they may have occurred only once in a
century. Historically, ranchers suppressed "cool" grass fires on the
bovines' behalf, allowing tinderboxes of dense foliage to build up
below taller trees. Factor in cheatgrass, a nonnative plant that would
not have had the opportunity to take root in America without the
overgrazing of cattle. This prolific weed provides dry, papery
kindling in early summer, perfectly conducive to massive forest fires.

84 Thanks to a growing specialization in the several stages of cattle
production and to producers seeking the best price at every step of
the process, your hamburger may have come from a steer who suffered
the brutality of transport between Mexico and the U.S. two or three
times. The USDA and the financial community hail this back-and-forth
animal shuffling as a development that shows how the various "cattle
sectors" can "complement" one another through "free trade." It's not
likely that the steers who suffer these junkets share the zeal of
their analysts.

85 Clog up your arteries on a diet loaded on saturated animal fat year
after year and you're putting yourself at risk for the great killers
of the Western world: heart attack and stroke. Of course, you can
always opt to forestall the inevitable with repeated angioplasty - a
$16,000 medical procedure done with a balloon- tipped catheter that
flattens plaque against artery walls, thus opening up passageways for
blood flow. But a vegetarian diet - along with regular exercise - can
have the same effect.

86 More than half of the nation's seafood companies do not follow
federal food-safety rules. Regulators from the Food and Drug
Administration visit processors only once a year to oversee
essentially voluntary company sanitation measures. Inspections often
entail nothing more than an overview of paperwork. Moreover, half of
all fish consumed in the U.S. are imported. None but a few of the
largest foreign processing plants are ever seen by U.S. inspectors.

87 Rats grow more slowly on vegetable protein than animal protein.
When this fact was discovered 75 years ago, the meat industry seized
upon it as proof that people should buy meat products. Subsequent
studies, however, have shown that foods that promote rapid growth
cause rapid aging and are more likely to facilitate cancer.

88 As hog feces and urine collect in giant cesspools around factory
farms, the sludge is broken down naturally by bacterial digestion.
Hazardous nitrogen is eliminated, but in the process it is converted
into ammonia gas. With subsequent rainfalls, the ammonia is returned
to the Earth, polluting rivers and streams.

89 In central California, 1,600 dairies produce the feces and urine of
a city of 21 million people. Not enough surrounding land is available
to absorb it all. When the San Francisco Chronicle reported that the
surplus cow sludge was polluting local waterways, only one state
official was employed to track it all down. Once he located a source,
frequently far upstream, he often discovered that a drainage ditch had
deliberately been built. Violation notices that he wrote up were often
simply ignored. In one case that made it to court, the judge imposed a
relatively small fine of $10,000. The dairy was soon polluting again.
The deputy district attorney in the area commented that the case was
only the tip of the iceberg.

90 One meal of a burger, fries, and a milk shake, or a large steak and
baked potato with sour cream, can put even the healthiest person at
risk for a heart attack. The same meal is all the more lethal to a
person with clogged arteries, according to a 1996 study at the
University of Maryland (see #85). Researchers there measured the
arterial response to stress in ten subjects before and after a
high-fat meal - one with 50 grams of fat or more. Fat-filled arteries
were able to expand (respond) only 50 percent of the normal amount.
After a no-fat vegetarian meal, there was no reduction in artery
function. A similar study reported in 2001 found that a moderately
high-fat meal dramatically reduces elasticity in the arteries, which
raises the risk for heart attack.

91 Drains and sewers at slaughterhouses often become backed up with
guts and coagulated blood. The pools that develop may come up to
workers' ankles. The muck may splash up onto the animals, spreading
contamination. Or whole heads of shackled animals may even be dragged
through it.

92 As fishermen find that their usual catch has been diminished by
overfishing, they are likely to turn to species lower on the aquatic
food chain to fill their nets. Knowingly or otherwise, people today
are putting fish that would normally be food for endangered fish on
their own dinner plates. If the trend continues, experts predict,
marine food webs will collapse in 30 to 40 years (see #4).

93 Hard, cold, strawless floors, filth, and space hardly bigger than
her own body - this is the life of a breeding sow on today's factory
farm. This highly intelligent creature will repeatedly endure
artificial insemination, pregnancy in solitary confinement, and
farrowing-stall imprisonment, where her body will be pinned in place
to expose her teats to her piglets. Relentless boredom, frustration,
and loneliness will drive her insane. When her body's productive
capacity wanes, she will be sent to slaughter.

94 At least one in every five U.S. cow herds is believed to be
infected with Johne's disease. The infection is increasingly being
linked to Crohn's disease in people, a condition of chronic diarrhea,
which requires victims to have parts of their intestines removed
periodically. In May 2001, the National Milk Producers Federation
asked the U.S. government for $1.3 billion to pay for mass herd
destruction to eradicate the cow scourge. Where did the group get such
a skewed sense of entitlement? Blame Congress: Every other dollar that
goes to U.S. farmers comes from taxpayers.

95 In order to grow necessarily immense amounts of feed grains (see
#31), farmers worldwide are depleting underground aquifers faster than
rainfall can keep up. The great Ogallala Aquifer in the central U.S.
is being depleted about 140 percent faster than it is being
replenished.

96 A USDA microbiologist declared in a Time magazine story on
processed poultry that "the final product is no different than if you
stuck it in the toilet and ate it." No wonder: A 1978 USDA rule allows
poultry processors to "wash" contaminated birds rather than discard
them or cut away affected parts. Wash, as interpreted by the poultry
industry, essentially amounts to a communal dunk in what industry
insiders refer to as the "fecal soup," virtually ensuring salmonella
cross-contamination.

97 To produce foie gras, male ducks are force-fed 6 or 7 pounds of
grain three times a day with an air-driven feeder tube. This torturous
process goes on for 28 days until the ducks' livers, from which the
pté is made, bloat to 6 to 12 times their normal size. About 10
percent of the ducks don't make it to slaughter: They die when their
stomachs burst.

98 Every year, 24,000 fishermen worldwide die on the job, making
fishing the most dangerous occupation in the world, according to the
Food and Agriculture Organization of the U.N. In the U.S., a fisherman
is 16 times as likely to die on the job as a policeman or fireman.

99 Every day 600 people in the U.S. die so suddenly from cardiac
arrest that they don't even make it to the hospital. Of the victims,
90 percent have two or more arteries narrowed by atherosclerosis
(hardening of the arteries), a disease inexorably linked to a
meat-based diet.

100 A heat wave in July 1995 killed about 4 million chickens east of
the Chesapeake Bay on the Delmarva Peninsula in a single weekend.
(Unofficial counts were as high as 10 million.) Such catastrophic
mortalities are not unusual. But you may not always hear about them;
no farmer is compelled to report when they happen, even though the
mounds of dead birds can be an environmental hazard. If local soil is
sandy, as it is on the Delmarva, burying carcasses (the cheapest, most
common solution) will contaminate the groundwater, no matter how
carefully it is done.

101 A symposium of scientists predicted in 1995 that energy shortages,
exhausted land, scarce water, and a doubling population will impose
more of a plant-based diet onto America's dinner tables by 2050. They
acknowledged that this diet, born of scarcity, would "actually be a
healthier one." Surely the sooner we all learn to enjoy it the better!

Copyright 2001 © Pamela Rice.

###############################

"Recognize meat for what it really is: the antibiotic- and
pesticide-laden corpse of a tortured animal." -- Ingrid Newkirk
  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
Kevin S. Wilson
 
Posts: n/a
Default All Hunnert at Once (What the Hell)

On 16 Jan 2004 12:52:21 -0800, (Default
User) reposted a delicious recipe for lamb:

Herb-marinated Roast Lamb

An easy to make but impressive looking dish.

1 HARRY'S ROASTED POTATOES RECIPE
5 to 6 pounds butterflied boneless leg of lamb
1/2 cup white wine vinegar
1 cup olive oil
1 teaspoon oregano
3 teaspoons dried mint
2 cloves garlic
2 tablespoons dried thyme
2 tablespoons dried rosemary

1) Place the vinegar, oil, all the herbs & spices into a
blender & process until emulsified. Decant into a suitable
container.

2) Prick the meat all over with a sharp knife point & place
it into the marinade. It should be fully immersed. Store covered
for 24 hours in the refrigerator, turning occasionally.

3) When ready, remove from the refrigerator, discard the
marinade & bring meat back to room temperature. Don't let the
looks deceive you, it will be great.

4) Transfer to a grilling rack, salt to taste & place into a
preheated broiler 4" from the flame. Broils 12-14 minutes per
side for medium-rare (pink) meat.
OR
Place on a hot BBQ about 6" from the coals & grill for about
10-12 minutes per side for medium-rare (pink) meat. Do not close
the lid as there is a lot of flaring at the beginning.

4) When ready, remove from heat, transfer to a carving board
and let rest for about 10 minutes. Slice across the grain with a
very sharp knife with the blade held at a 45 degree angle into
very thin slices.

5) Arrange the slices in a circle around the perimeter of a
large serving dish. Place the roast potatoes into the centre,
garnish with fresh parsley and/or rosemary sprigs, (or what
ever), and serve.

Nutrition (per serving): 896 calories

Serves 6

Source: A long forgotten & lost magazine article


Harry's Roasted Potatoes



4 to 5 pounds potatoes
1/2 cup olive or vegetable oil
1/3 cup hot water
1 tablespoon dark soy sauce
1 tablespoon oregano
1 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder, to taste

1) Peel & quarter the potatoes. The chunks should all be
about the same size.

2) Par boil the potatoes for about 10-15 minutes, drain and
turn out into a 9x13 inch casserole dish.

3) Mix all the other ingredients & pour over the potatoes
taking care that all the surfaces have been coated.

4) Place into an oven that has been preheated to 350 deg. F.
and bake for about 35-40 minutes, turning occasionally so that
all the sides become golden brown. Remove from heat & serve.

Nutrition (per serving): 495 calories

Serves 6

Source: Harry Demidavicius


--
Kevin S. Wilson
Tech Writer at a University Somewhere in Idaho
"Anything, when cooked in large enough batches, will be vile."
--Dag Right-square-bracket-gren, in alt.religion.kibology
  #4 (permalink)   Report Post  
Harry Demidavicius
 
Posts: n/a
Default All Hunnert at Once (What the Hell)

On Fri, 16 Jan 2004 17:13:47 -0700, Kevin S. Wilson >
wrote:

>On 16 Jan 2004 12:52:21 -0800, (Default
>User) reposted a delicious recipe for lamb:
>
>Herb-marinated Roast Lamb
>
> An easy to make but impressive looking dish.
>
> 1 HARRY'S ROASTED POTATOES RECIPE
> 5 to 6 pounds butterflied boneless leg of lamb
> 1/2 cup white wine vinegar
> 1 cup olive oil
> 1 teaspoon oregano
> 3 teaspoons dried mint
> 2 cloves garlic
> 2 tablespoons dried thyme
> 2 tablespoons dried rosemary
>
>1) Place the vinegar, oil, all the herbs & spices into a
>blender & process until emulsified. Decant into a suitable
>container.
>
>2) Prick the meat all over with a sharp knife point & place
>it into the marinade. It should be fully immersed. Store covered
>for 24 hours in the refrigerator, turning occasionally.
>
>3) When ready, remove from the refrigerator, discard the
>marinade & bring meat back to room temperature. Don't let the
>looks deceive you, it will be great.
>
>4) Transfer to a grilling rack, salt to taste & place into a
>preheated broiler 4" from the flame. Broils 12-14 minutes per
>side for medium-rare (pink) meat.
>OR
>Place on a hot BBQ about 6" from the coals & grill for about
>10-12 minutes per side for medium-rare (pink) meat. Do not close
>the lid as there is a lot of flaring at the beginning.
>
>4) When ready, remove from heat, transfer to a carving board
>and let rest for about 10 minutes. Slice across the grain with a
>very sharp knife with the blade held at a 45 degree angle into
>very thin slices.
>
>5) Arrange the slices in a circle around the perimeter of a
>large serving dish. Place the roast potatoes into the centre,
>garnish with fresh parsley and/or rosemary sprigs, (or what
>ever), and serve.
>
>Nutrition (per serving): 896 calories
>
>Serves 6
>
>Source: A long forgotten & lost magazine article
>
>
>Harry's Roasted Potatoes
>
>
>
> 4 to 5 pounds potatoes
> 1/2 cup olive or vegetable oil
> 1/3 cup hot water
> 1 tablespoon dark soy sauce
> 1 tablespoon oregano
> 1 teaspoon black pepper
> 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder, to taste
>
>1) Peel & quarter the potatoes. The chunks should all be
>about the same size.
>
>2) Par boil the potatoes for about 10-15 minutes, drain and
>turn out into a 9x13 inch casserole dish.
>
>3) Mix all the other ingredients & pour over the potatoes
>taking care that all the surfaces have been coated.
>
>4) Place into an oven that has been preheated to 350 deg. F.
>and bake for about 35-40 minutes, turning occasionally so that
>all the sides become golden brown. Remove from heat & serve.
>
>Nutrition (per serving): 495 calories
>
>Serves 6
>
>Source: Harry Demidavicius


Kevin, I make that by memory. I just reviewed the recipe, and I
*still* make the meat and the potatoes that way. :0)

Harry
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