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  • Massive Beef Recall: It's What's Not for Dinner

    cow beef cutsNo hamburgers tonight, please:  129,000 pounds of beef "products" (ground beef and steak cuts) are being recalled by the USDA due to suspected E.coli contamination, in a 15-state area. That's a lot of beef and a lot of burger-free families.

    The beef was processed by Davis Creek Meats and Seafood of Michigan and sent to Gordon Foods distribution centers in Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin. The affected meats were mostly steak cuts that were mechanically tenderized (mmm, sounds appetizing). While the USDA says that steaks rarely are a worrisome carrier of E.coli, the fact that they were mechanically tenderized leaves some room for doubt.  They suggest that these meats not be served rare.

    However this is a Class I recall, the highest level of hazard (here's a list of open recalls; there are more than you might suspect!). Consumers are, confusingly, advised to cook the affected beef thoroughly and follow safe meat-handling practices, and also advised to simply throw away the affected beef since it's unclear that the "safe" practices would be enough to protect against E. coli, known to be deadly in children.

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  • Study: Beef-Eating Moms-To-Be May Make Infertile Sons

    beef cutsWhen I was pregnant with my older son, I had anemia and my OB/GYN told me to eat a lot of beef.  Being a vegetarian at the time, I gagged slightly and thanked her for her advice, then went out and loaded up on spinach for the iron I lacked.  Apparently, that was a good thing, as a new study links a prenatal diet high in beef with low sperm counts in the resultant babies.  This was a long-term study of 387 men born between 1949 and 1983 whose mother's diets, among other things, were studied in order to determine environmental causation for variations in later reproductive health.  While all of these men were able to father a child without medical assistance, researchers noted that the men with the lowest sperm counts (many of which were considered so low as to be classified as "sub-fertile") had mothers with the highest consumption of beef during pregnancy.

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