tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post2960135264163767157..comments2024-03-28T19:10:00.002+08:00Comments on KTemoc Konsiders ........: Doggone East is East and Beefburger West is WestKTemochttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09951253039042572381noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-58068603374718387532017-07-13T15:22:06.706+08:002017-07-13T15:22:06.706+08:00Re meat, I have partaken of pork including wild bo...Re meat, I have partaken of pork including wild boars (naturally, wakakaka), beef (cows, buffaloes, oxen), mutton-lamb (lambs, sheep, goats), venison (many types of deer including pelandok), horse meat, kangaroo meat, emu meat (but it's more of a fowl rather than animal), cats, musang (civet cats), snakes, flying foxes (dangerous because of nipah virus, don't eat this anymore), but I haven't tried dog, camel, bear.KTemochttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09951253039042572381noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-35990891179622110622017-07-13T14:33:33.713+08:002017-07-13T14:33:33.713+08:00Horse meat is actually not bad tasting.
However,...Horse meat is actually not bad tasting. <br /><br />However, as the EU and UK horsemeat scandal in 2013 showed, there are a number of risks in the distribution of horsemeat.<br /><br />Horsemeat for human consumption has a fraction of the commercial value of Beef , Chicken or Pork.<br /><br />So if it is sold without proper labelling, or secretly blended with other meat e.g. in minced meat or burgers it is a form of Commercial Fraud.<br /><br />Also , because horsemeat is often slaughtered and processed in secret and outside of proper channels, or supposedly slaughtered for non-human consumption, whether it meets minimum hygiene standards for human consumption can be doubtful.<br /><br />Monsterballhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13694084861364885645noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11109306.post-18886912081309029632017-07-13T14:02:16.521+08:002017-07-13T14:02:16.521+08:00The Dog meat seller could have been charged under ...The Dog meat seller could have been charged under any number of laws, provided there is a will among the authorities to bring him to face the law.<br /><br />He could be charged under the Food Act 1983, if he had not openly labelled that it is dog meat, or pretended it was beef, chicken or mutton. Either that or declare that it is not for human consumption - i.e. it is legal to sell dog meat not for human consumption.<br /><br />In addition, he could be charged under various Local Government by-laws (depending on local regulation)requiring meat sold for public consumption must be slaughtered and processed in a registered licensed establishment. <br />I bet the Dog wasn't slaughtered in in any "licensed establishment"Monsterballhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13694084861364885645noreply@blogger.com