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British Food Journal Volume 85 Issue 3 1983

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 1 March 1983

190

Abstract

Safety precautions in the use of raw materials, in manufacturing and processing, marketing and enforcement of food and drug law on purity and quality may appear nowadays to be largely a matter of routine, with manufacturers as much involved and interested in maintaining a more or less settled equilibrium as the enforcement agencies. Occasionally the peace is shattered, eg, a search and recovery operation of canned goods of doubtful bacterial purity or containing excess metal contamination, seen very much as an isolated incident; or the recent very large enforcement enterprise in the marketing of horseflesh (and other substitutions) for beef. The nationwide sale and distribution of meat on such a vast scale, only possible by reason of marketing methods — frozen blocks of boneless meat, which even after thawing out is not easily distinguishable from the genuine even in the eye of the expert; this is in effect only a fraud always around in the long ago years built up into a massive illicit trade.

Citation

(1983), "British Food Journal Volume 85 Issue 3 1983", British Food Journal, Vol. 85 No. 3, pp. 67-96. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011752

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1983, MCB UP Limited

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