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I recently discovered a show called FoodTech on the History channel. Has anybody seen this show? It's quite interesting - the host takes a hands-on farm-to-packaging tour of various food items.
Todnight I sawg an episode about breafast food - pancakes, bacon, sausage and orange juice. What the host does is break down the meal into ingredients and then goes out to the food industry sites to find out how it gets to the home cook.
For instance, this show sourced baking soda and buttermilk for the pancakes, the bacon & sausage, and the oranges.
For the baking soda, the host went down into a mine that mines the mineral (trona) that grinds up real fine into baking soda - from solid rock wall into bags of white baking soda.
Then he went to a dairy and milked a cow by hand, attached a milking machine, and took part in the process of adding culture and salt to make the buttermilk.
For the bacon and sausage, he went from pig conception through packaging. He visited with a hog farmer who showed him around and talked about breeding and the life-cycle and growth of pigs - what they eat, how much they eat, how long it takes for them to mature, etc. Following the hog farm, he visited a pork processing plant where he watched and talked to employees who process bacon and sausage - those who cut and prepare the big pork belly slabs and trim out the loin, the trimmers, the smoking houses, showed us the machine that cuts and slices the bacon for packaging and talked with the folks who arrange the bacon slices on the cardboard packaging prior to it being wrapped in plastic. Many of the processes, he actually does along with one of the employees.
After the bacon, he went to the sausage-making section where he looked at the scrap meatthat gets turned into sausage. He shows us the meat in the mixer, added the spices, and then he went to where the link sausages are being made, Here he ran one of the machines producing long ropes of sausage that would get cut into links.
After that, he went to Vermont to see how maple syrup is produced, and then to a plant where a corn syrup-based pancake syrup is produced where he showed us the syrup-making process and all the ingredients that go into the maple-flavored syrup.
Finally, he takes us to an orange grove where he showed us the entire orange juice-making process from harvvesting the oranges through sorting, juice extraction and what happens with the peels.
Very interesting and informative. I learned quite a bit that I hadn't know before. I think I'll keep my eyes open for future episodes.
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