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  2. Maceration (bone) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maceration_(bone)

    Lipids and fatty acids in the bone and in the fat tissues tend to stain the bone brown. Oxidising bleaches may be used to whiten the bone, but if too much is used the perchlorate or hypochlorite damages the bone tissue, leaving it chalky and brittle. Hydrogen peroxide at quite low concentrations, say 1% to 3% replenished every few days, is less ...

  3. Rendering (animal products) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rendering_(animal_products)

    Tallow, derived from beef waste, is an important raw material in the steel rolling industry, providing lubrication when compressing steel sheets. Meat and bone meal in animal feed was one route for the late-20th century spread of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad-cow disease, BSE), which is also fatal to humans. Early in the 21st century ...

  4. Osteophagy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteophagy

    Wolverines are observed finding large bones invisible in deep snow and are specialists at scavenging bones specifically to cache. Wolverine upper molars are rotated 90 degrees inward, which is the identifying dentition characteristic of the family Mustelidae (weasel family), of which the wolverine has the most mass, so they can crack the bones and eat the frozen marrow of large animals.

  5. Dressed weight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dressed_weight

    Dressed weight (also known as dead weight or carcass weight) refers to the weight of an animal after being partially butchered, removing all the internal organs and often the head as well as inedible (or less desirable) portions of the tail and legs. It includes the bones, cartilage and other body structure still attached after this initial ...

  6. Bone char - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_char

    Bone char is primarily made from cattle and pig bones; however, to prevent the spread of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease, the skull and spine are no longer used. [2] The bones are heated in a sealed vessel at up to 700 °C (1,292 °F); the oxygen concentration must be kept low while doing this, as it affects the quality of the product, particularly its adsorption capacity.

  7. Advanced meat recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_meat_recovery

    Advanced meat recovery (AMR) is a slaughterhouse deboning process by which the last traces of skeletal muscle meat are removed from animal bones after the primal cuts have been carved off manually. The machinery used in this process separates meat from bone by scraping, shaving, or pressing the meat from the bone without breaking or grinding ...

  8. What those grocery store labels on your beef really mean - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2017-05-24-what-those...

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  9. Mechanically separated meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanically_separated_meat

    Mechanically separated meat: pasztet Mechanically deboned meat: frozen chicken Mechanically separated meat (MSM), mechanically recovered/reclaimed meat (MRM), or mechanically deboned meat (MDM) is a paste-like meat product produced by forcing pureed or ground beef, pork, mutton, turkey or chicken under high pressure through a sieve or similar device to separate the bone from the edible meat ...