enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 9 Things You Should Know When Buying Ground Beef - AOL

    www.aol.com/9-things-know-eating-ground...

    Ground chuck is slightly less fatty—falling in the 15 to 20 percent range, called lean—and comes from the shoulder. Ground round is made from hind leg cuts and clocks in at around 12% to 15% ...

  3. Ground beef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_beef

    The allowable amount in France is 5 to 20% (15% being used by most food chains). In Germany, regular ground beef may contain up to 15% fat while the special "Tatar" for steak tartare may contain less than 5% fat. Both hamburger and ground beef can have added seasoning, phosphate, extenders, or binders added, but no additional water is permitted ...

  4. Pink slime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_slime

    Lean finely textured beef in its finished form, from an ABC News report about the product. Lean finely textured beef (LFTB [1])—also called finely textured beef, [2] boneless lean beef trimmings (BLBT [3]), and colloquially known as pink slime—is a meat by-product used as a food additive to ground beef and beef-based processed meats, as a filler, or to reduce the overall fat content of ...

  5. Publix recalls 13 ground beef products that might have ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/publix-recalls-13-ground-beef...

    That’s the bad news about the recall that hits regular and Greenwise products.

  6. Trans fat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans_fat

    Trans fat contents in various foods, ranked in g per 100 g [42] Food type Trans fat content shortenings 10–33 margarine, stick 6.2–16.8 [43] butter 2–7 whole milk 0.07–0.1 breads/cake products 0.1–10 cookies and crackers 1–8 tortilla chips 5.8 [43] cake frostings, sweets 0.1–7 animal fat 0–5 [44] ground beef 1

  7. Meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meat

    The fat content of meat varies widely with the species and breed of animal, the way in which the animal was raised, what it was fed, the part of the body, and the methods of butchering and cooking. Wild animals such as deer are leaner than farm animals, leading those concerned about fat content to choose game such as venison. Decades of ...

  8. Marbled meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marbled_meat

    Marbled Kobe beef Extensive fat marbling in slices of high-grade Wagyu beef Marbled entrecôte from Angus cattle, a rib eye cut. Marbled meat is meat that contains various amounts of intramuscular fat, giving it an appearance similar to marble. The term is principally applied to red meat.

  9. Raw meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raw_meat

    Raw meat generally refers to any type of uncooked muscle tissue of an animal used for food. In the meat production industry, the term ‘meat’ refers specifically to mammalian flesh, while the words ‘poultry’ and ‘seafood’ are used to differentiate between the tissue of birds and aquatic creatures.