Why prefer prime-cut sausage over MSM sausage
Yesterday I saw a site that claimed their fairly expensive poultry sausages are made of prime cuts (thigh, breast), rather than the usual mechanically separated meat.
Why would one prefer a prime-cut sausage over MSM, as both are ultimately going to be minced into a fine paste and made into a sausage?
Best Answer
It's probably simple marketing.
People like the idea of eating 'prime' meat more than 'scraggy' meat, and tend to assume it makes for a better taste and texture (even when it might not).
This is probably the same principle behind things like high meat and low fat sausages - people buy them because they fear 'mystery meat' and anything with cheap content, even when that cheaper content is better suited - such as fat and rusk keeping sausages moist and soft.
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Answer 2
There is great debate about MSM and how safe it is. Diseases such as Mad Cow Disease are transmitted when spinal tissue (containing the prions that cause the disease in our bodies) "leak" into the meat. Prions scare me because it is not a living organism like a bacterium or virus. It's just loose bits of protein that bond with other proteins and cause havoc. Relatively little is known about prions and how they interact with other proteins, bacteria and virii in our own bodies.
Whether prions are the agent which causes disease or merely a symptom caused by a different agent is still debated by a minority of researchers. The following sections describe several hypotheses: some pertain to the composition of the infectious agent (protein-only, protein with other components, virus, or other), while others pertain to its mechanism of reproduction.
Answer 3
Darn this sort of thing raises my hackles! MSM is metely mechanically separated meat. The reason spent hen is mechanically de-boned is because the carcuss is very slim with little meat. This is jsut because of the bird's genetics, nothing more. In other words, this breed tends to be a good deal lighter in muscle. But Granny made all her soup from spent hen, because it had a bunch more flavour. And, while it is not a roaster, it is a "fricasee chicken" which means it is both old and tough, unless one cooks it for a long time. This is a result of old ligamentous and conne4ctive tissue, wghich is very tough. But cut it fine enough for sausage and there is no problem. In fact it superior, more intense flavour is a big plus. Its all about marketing and the big guys are happy to eliminate at elast one competitor at any time. geoff
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