Selecting Meat
Selecting Meat is of Key importance to getting the most out of your eating. Good
beef is of a reddish-brown color and contains no clots of blood. A
pale-pink color indicates that the animal was diseased; a dark-purple
color that the animal has suffered from some acute febrile affection or
was not slaughtered, but died with the blood in its body.
Good beef is firm and elastic to the touch; when pressed with
the finger, no impression is left. It should be so dry upon the surface
as scarcely to moisten the fingers. Meat that is wet, sodden, and
flabby should not be eaten. Good beef is marbled with spots of white
fat. The suet should be dry and crumble easily. If the fat has the
appearance of wet parchment or is jelly-like, the beef is not good.
Yellow fat is an indication of old, lean animals.
Good beef has little or no odor. If any odor is perceptible,
it is not disagreeable. Diseased meat has a sickly odor, resembling the
breath of feverish persons. When such meat is roasted, it emits a
strong, offensive smell. The condition of a piece of beef may be
ascertained by dipping a knife in hot water, drying it, and passing it
through the meat. Apply to the nose on withdrawal, and if the meat is
not good, a disagreeable odor will be quite perceptible.
Good beef will not shrink greatly in cooking. In boiling or
stewing, the shrinkage is computed to be about one pound in four; in
baking, one and one fourth pounds in four. Beef of a close, firm fiber
shrinks less than meat of coarse fiber.
Good veal is slightly reddish or pink, and the fat should be
white and clear. Avoid veal without fat, as such is apt to be too young
to be wholesome.
Good mutton should be firm and compact, the flesh,
fine-grained and bright-red, with an accumulation of very hard and
clear white fat along the borders of the muscles.
Selecting Meat is important, but so keeping it fresh. Meat should not be kept until decomposition sets in, as by the
putrefaction of the albuminous elements certain organic poisons are
generated, and flesh partaken of in this condition is liable to result
in serious illness. Meat containing white specks is probably infested
by parasites and should not be used as food. Head for the top
of Selecting MeatReturn
to Meats Go
Learn more about Proper Nutrition
Head for the 7
Habits of Weight Loss Home

The
information found in and throughout The 7 Habits of Weight loss
(www.7habitsofweightloss.com) is not intended as a substitute for the
advice or treatment that may have been prescribed by your physician.Information
found here should NOT be construed as definitive or binding medical
advice and is NOT intended to diagnose, prescribe, nor endorse any
brand of products or services. Always seek the advice of your physician
or other qualified health provider prior to starting any new weight loss or exercise regimen or with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
|