One of the many strange jobs I’ve done…..
….is work as
Production Manager in a large sausage factory! When I say ‘large’ I mean it was
one of the main suppliers for a large supermarket chain. Probably a strange choice for a young
bloke who had just qualified with an Ecology degree but it has given me a great
insight into the whole food / meat / traceability thing if nothing else.
BS5750, replaced by
ISO 9002 and more recently by 9001 (I think) is / was all about record keeping,
quality control and traceability and this particular factory was really hot on
it. I suppose they were quite lucky because nearly all of the meat was
produced, butchered and processed on site so the issue of bits of horse turning
up wasn’t really an issue. The only time that particular company bought in meat
that was butchered elsewhere was during busy periods like xmas etc but even
then it was a relatively small amount.
All the animals arrived
in the abattoir with their own unique ID saying where they had come from.
However, it goes back much further than that – it would be possible to trace
the batch numbers of every piece of feed that the animal had consumed in its
life, where that feed came from, where the ingredients used in the feed came
from, which operator had used the mixer that day… etc etc.
A pig ID tattoo |
At the other end, the code stamped on the pack of sausages would say they were made at our
factory, along with another code which would allow QA within the factory to see
which batch of animals was used in the sausage, details of the other
ingredients, what time it was made, on what line and which operators were
working on that line that made them. Plus temperature records etc, etc.
The paper trail was
/ is comprehensive and occasionally very useful!
However, the only
time this system got a bit woolly was during butchery and it always concerned
me a bit. Imagine a whole pig carcass going into a butchery with 20 or 30
blokes working in it. Paperwork comes with the carcass but it quickly gets
reduced to the various bits and sent here and there. At this point the tattoo
on the pig or its ‘passport’ becomes pretty irrelevant – there is pretty much
no way of telling which dissected pigs are which in a huge stainless steel bin
containing just bits. This part of the trail relies on diligence and a
conscientious approach alone and is the real weak link. This weak point appears to be where the
horsemeat fiasco has been allowed to happen at Findus etc.
Like I said, never
an issue where I worked as nearly all our meat came from our own abattoir and
butchery, but somewhere else where random crates of pre-butchered frozen meat
just arrived on lorries could allow all sorts of problems and abuses. The
paperwork says it’s beef / pork and it’s all chopped up so how the hell are you
going to be able to identify it as anything else? Unfortunately, the robustness
of ISO 9002 / 9001 or whatever it’s called now has become the instrument of
doom – such is people’s faith in the paper trail that the provenance of meat
isn’t challenged. Plus the pressure on meat buyers within companies to get cheaper and cheaper supplies must lead to quite a temptation to 'ask no questions'.
I like horses, I
like riding them but I’ve also eaten them and it doesn’t bother me. I think the
story with meat products is ‘you get what you pay for’. Cheap sausages are
simply pig skin, bread (or ‘rusk’ more technically) and the minimum amount of
‘pork’ which won’t be from the premium cuts. A nice Butcher’s Choice or similar though actually has mostly nice chunks of pork in & much less fat and bread. So if you’re going to buy ‘economy’ products,
you can’t really moan when you get something that is full of cheap crap!
Bit of a scary
story here, especially if you are partial to a kebab after 14 pints on a Friday night…
About once a month,
I visit a local abattoir and fill up the car with meat for the doggies. They’ve
always eaten proper meat and bone, not that dog food muck. That’s perhaps why
they’re so fit and healthy.
Anyway, one day I
got home and was unloading 50kgs of pig and ox hearts from the car. Next door,
the man from the local kebab shop was posting a menu through the letterbox,
having worked his way along the whole street. He saw my haul and his eyes
nearly popped out! He asked where I got it,
how much I had paid and got more and more excited! You could see his brain
working overtime and I think you can see what I’m trying to say!
"Ello mate, donna or shish innit? Chilli sauce mate?" |
No more kebabs for
me… unless I’m blind drunk obviously…
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