found wood pulp and cellulose in several cheese brands sold in the US.
so it came as a bit of a surprise to a German baker who has reportedly been selling sawdust cookies for around two
decades, who has recently been ordered to stop, photograph Olia
Nayda/Unsplash, An administrative court in the southwestern German city of
Karlsruhe has upheld a decision to ban the sale of cookies made with sawdust,
despite the producer’s claim that they were a traditional vegetable product.
The unnamed baker had been operating a mail order business, selling his sawdust
cookies all over Germany. He openly listed sawdust as an ingredient on the
packaging of his biscuits, and had already written to the city of Karlsruhe
about his practice back in 2004, but received no answer. Then, in 2017, a
routine examination of a biscuit sample led to a sales ban which he then
contested in court, “These cookies must not be allowed into the food chain
because they are not safe, and are, objectively seen, not fit for human
consumption,” the Baden-Württemberg’s State Higher Administrative Court
decision read. In it, the judges added that despite the baker’s claim that
sawdust was a traditional ingredient, actually “it isn’t even used in the
industrial animal feed sector”,
photograph Shop Reddish, the baker claimed that the “microbiological” sawdust he used
in his cookies was a “herbal product” similar to bran, and therefore suitable
as a substitute for flour. As for historical use of sawdust and other wood byproduct
in food, there is a lot of it, dating back from the 1700s to present day, according
to the Conucopia Institute, in the 1700s, European bakers started using sawdust
in their products, so they could lower the cost and thus attract more
customers, “At some point some clever miller was like, ‘Hey, what if we combine
the flour with sawdust?’” Penn State food historian Bryan McDonald told the Cornucopia Institute. “‘We’re selling stuff by
weight, and people don’t really have a good way of knowing what’s flour and
what’s sawdust.’” so is the ban on the bakers sawdust cookies a good or bad thing?
No comments:
Post a Comment