Yes, unfortunately unless you've actually done any curing yourself, most people don't know this. The only bacon that might be healthier is bacon from organic pork, which is pretty hard to find.laklak wrote:A lot of food sold as healthy and unprocessed is anything but. A good example is the "nitrate free" cured meats. Thing is, they aren't nitrate free. It's a fucking lie. If you cure meat without nitrates it's brown or gray and is highly susceptible to Clostridium botulinum growth during the curing process. You don't want that stuff in your meat.
What they do is add celery juice, which contains large amounts of sodium nitrate, EXACTLY the same chemical I add to my bacon and sausages. All cured meats, even the extra-expensive "nitrate free" ones, contain exactly the same amounts of sodium nitrate. Oh, and you'd best get one with added ascorbic acid, because that's what prevents the nitrates from turning in nitrosamine when heated. Nitrosamine is the stuff that is carcinogenic, not the nitrates. Anyone who is eating truly nitrate free cured meat is a) making it at home b) eating gray bacon and c) fucking stupid.
Another is the "uncured" bacon you see, again in the extra expensive, healthy section. There is NO SUCH THING as uncured bacon. Bacon, by definition, is a cured meat product. Besides, curing meat isn't unhealthy.
Here's my favorite - some asshat company is selling "gluten free" bacon. WTF? Gluten comes from wheat. Even if you fed your hogs a diet consisting only of wheat the meat doesn't have any goddamned gluten in it. I know of no method of meat curing that uses wheat flour, so it's another scam to take advantage of stupid consumers.
Rant over. I'm irritated because I had a potential client take exception to the fact that I added curing salt to my bacon, he wanted it "nitrate free". Fuck him.
Michael Pollan offers some great rules about food in his book "Food Rules". Here's one of them that applies to what you post:
Avoid food products that make health claims – This sounds counterintuitive, but consider: For a product to carry a health claim on the package, it must first have a package, so right off the bat it’s more likely to be a processed rather than a whole food. Then, only the big food manufacturers have the wherewithal to secure FDA-approved health claims for their products and then trumpet them to the world. Generally, it is the products of modern food science that makes the boldest health claims, and these are often founded on incomplete and bad science. Don’t forget that margarine, one of the first industrial foods to claim it was more healthful than the traditional food it replaced, butter, turned out to contain transfats that give people heart attacks. The healthiest food in the supermarket – fresh produce – doesn’t boast about its healthfulness, because the growers don’t have the budget or the packaging. Don’t take the silence of the yams as a sign they have nothing valuable to say about your health.