A Better Crunchy Snack?

I did, and to some degree still do, think that a snack, something in a bag, was supposed to scratch an itch, so to speak, maybe fill you up a bit, but never was it supposed to be, ugh, healthy!

Well, maybe I am a minority. You want healthy? Eat an apple or an orange. Someone has decided to put good for you and good into a bag. Raymond Chung, president and CEO of Greenwave Foods has another idea: extruded edamame crisps.

Read about there here http://bit.ly/HealthyCrunch or see if they are already on a shelf in a store near you.

Might be a worthwhile substitute in the kiddos lunch boxes from the processed no-real-food-to-be-found snacks they enjoy now.

Is It Or Isn’t It? What Are You Eating?

What Can Blockchain Tech Do For Food Tracking?

I found this in my in box.  Foreign shrimp being raised in dubious conditions.  I am being kind.

Here’s the link about it and why it is so very important to know, I mean to KNOW, where your food comes from.  I have long avoided non-American shrimp and this is not any reason to stop my own personal embargo.

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Factory fishing?

Isn’t that a quaint picture?  When you think of the fishing industry, is that close to the idea in your head?  Yeah, me too.  Commercial fishing is bigger than that.

Commercial Fish Processing
Commercial Fish Processing

In the aftermath of the theater of the absurd, AKA, the State Of The Union speech-more for rhetoric than facts, and that’s for all SOTU speeches-a tempest of confusion, slight of fin, and plain deception forges ahead at full pace. That trickery is the fake fish industry.  Let me remove confusion before it starts.  Not every commercial operation is fake and there are many good people in many good companies doing good work.  But, there are some bad actors, too, and it is they we need to guard against.

In the Foodnavigator-usa.com, Elizabeth Crawford writes an article, dateline January 31, 2018, about how molecular biology, and DNA scanning, will be the next of several efforts to curb fake fish by tracking the real fish from boat to store.

A recent post on this blog discussed the possible use of blockchain technology to track country of origin in foods, including fish.

In the media

USA Today writer Elizabeth Weise has written about the fish supply, stating in her February 23, 2009 article “Something Fishy? Counterfeit Foods Enter The U.S. Market!!” “Fish is the most frequently faked food Americans buy,” as well as here.

In Larry Olmstead’s recent book, Real Food/Fake Food: Why You Don’t Know What You Are Eating and What You Can Do About It, he writes a chapter of fake fish, including the fakery in the sushi industry. “How terrible is it? A study for New York City seafood done by scientists at a nonprofit marine conservation group Oceana found fraud in 58 percent of retail outlets and 39 percent of restaurants. The one especially scary finding . . . was that every sushi restaurant from which samples were collected—100 percent of them—served fake fish.”

There are ways to manage the problem. Fraud in fish may never be eliminated but measures can be taken to make significant impacts in the practice. Curiously, not one of these measures comes from the government. All are private enterprise, seeking innovative methods to solve a problem. The worst thing that can happen is the government to step in and with no expertise in the field, tell private business they have to stop or, maybe worse, impose a stifling amount of fees.

Read more about Olmstead’s suggestions as well as what he found in all manner of food fakery as well as food wholesomeness.

These are links to Amazon, for whom I am an affiliate seller. When you purchase from Amazon through these links, I earn a small commission at no cost to you. The first is for Olmstead’s book, the second for a well reviewed expose on olive oil.