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Mystery meat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mystery meat

Mystery meat is a disparaging term for meat products that have an unidentifiable source, typically ground or otherwise ultra-processed foods such as burger patties, chicken nuggets, Salisbury steaks, sausages and hot dogs. Most often the term is used in reference to food served in institutional cafeterias, such as prison food or a North American school lunch.[1][2]

The term is also sometimes applied to meat products where the species from which the meat has come from is known, but the cuts of meat used are unknown. This is often the case where the cuts of meat used include offal and mechanically separated meat, or when non-meat substitutes such as textured vegetable protein are used to stretch the meat, where explicitly stating the type of meat used might diminish the perceived palatability of the product to some purchasers.[citation needed]

Common products

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The most common mystery meat products sold in the United States include Spam and sometimes sausages. It is disputed whether or not bologna/baloney is a mystery meat product.

Use in marketing

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In 2016, Nissin, a Japanese food company that produces Cup Noodles, started to call their ingredients as self-deprecating Nazoniku (literally Mystery Meat) as part of their official marketing campaign. Nazoniku, or formally known as Daisuminchi (literally Minced Meat Dice), are made from pork, soybeans and other ingredients.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Dodd, D. Aileen (2019-11-10). "Gwinnett school to become site for swine flu shots". AJC.com. Archived from the original on 2010-12-18. Retrieved 2009-11-18.
  2. ^ "No more mystery meat! Some schools go organic for lunch". USA Today. Associated Press. 2004-09-12.
  3. ^ "The true identity of Cup Noodle's 'mystery meat'". Japan Today. 2017-09-21.
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