In the US, the Department of Agriculture, which was founded by Abraham Lincoln in 1862 and now encompasses almost 30 federal agencies, has a broad regulatory scope that includes farming, ranching, and also forestry industries. It is also “tasked with administering several social welfare programs, including free school lunches and food stamps,” according to Investopedia. Independent of the USDA is the Food and Drug Administration, which regulates dairy, seafood, produce, packaged foods, some aspects of our egg supply and even our bottled water. In a weird separation of regulatory powers, game and “exotic” meats are inspected and regulated by the FDA rather than the USDA.
In theory, the USDA is tasked with keeping our nation’s supply of meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products in a healthy
Products with more than 3% raw meat, 2% or more cooked meat (or other portions of the carcass), or 30% or more fat or tallow, are under USDA jurisdiction. Conversely, products with less than 3% raw meat, less than 2% cooked meat (or other portions of the carcass), or less than 30% fat or tallow, are overseen by FDA, as are products containing “other meats.”
My favorite division of regulatory power between the two agencies is the one which governs our sandwiches. The USDA controls open-faced sandwiches, where the ratio of meat to bread etc. is more than 50%. But your standard sandwich with two slices of bread (with a filling that comprises less than 50% of the whole sandwich) is controlled by the FDA. But even with two competing regulatory agencies supposedly overseeing the safety and quality of our food, other players lend a heavy hand that can undermine the finest intentions. An unfortunate combination of regulation “influencers,” otherwise known as industry lobbyists, add their shenanigans to the mischief created by a preponderance of former Big Ag executives getting appointed to influential positions within those agencies. This combination has considerably weakened the regulatory powers of both agencies.
One commonly used analysis is that food additives are deemed innocent in the US until overwhelmingly proved guilty, while in the EU, they have to be proven overwhelmingly unharmful to human consumption to be allowed in food. In fact, US companies selling their products in the EU alter their composition so that the EU version is often better quality. Failing that, at least the companies cannot use the number of additives and artificial colorants that are allowed in the US. (NB photos of the two examples are taken from foodbabe.com before Brexit)
On a personal level, US grocery stores seem to have a huge variety of products, even within a given
Even Italy’s industrial strawberries are smaller and lack the huge white cores typical of the dread Driscoll ones. And yes local stores have what my son-in-law calls pane finto or fake bread which we would term a white sandwich loaf. Still, we look for groceries that we liked at home and try local variations. Sometimes with success, other times, not so much. Each of us has individual heartbreaks. While my husband laments the loss of Hellman’s or Duke’s mayonnaise for his BLT sandwiches, I have yet to find a great corn tortilla like the ones produced by Ula in Virginia.
After owning one of the best cooking stores in the US for 47 years, Nancy Pollard writes a blog about food in all its aspects – recipes, film, books, travel, superior sources and food related issues.
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