
Have you ever seen one of those dinosaur-shaped chicken nuggets and wondered,
how do they do that? I personally imagined some kind of cookie-cutter shaped blade on a big machine.
Wrong. Apparently, this is what
chicken nuggets
look like before they’re cooked. The chicken is mechanically separated
and de-boned, then the remaining meat is ground-down into this
unappetizing paste. According to
Michael Kindt,
the goop is then disinfected, re-flavored and bleached back to the
whitish color we all associate with cooked chicken breast. And of
course, shaped along the way.
While I’m not sure what background Kindt has in food science, the image alone is compelling enough.

According to
McDonald’s,
a four-piece serving of McNuggets contains 190 calories, 100 of which
come from trans fat. They also contain 400 milligrams of sodium, and
along with modified food starch, dextrose and citric acid. However,
there’s no reason to target McDonald’s, this image could be from any of a
number of nugget producers.
Jamie Oliver
once whipped up a batch of nugget-goo for a class of elementary school
children on his show. He was quite dismayed that the American
children
were willing to eat the nuggets even after seeing how they were made,
whereas British children in the same situation were sufficiently
disgusted to decline a taste-test.
We hope this image will give you another reason to skip the fast-food drive-through and prepare some healthier fare at home.
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