bbqbrett
Not sure that is correct. In more than one federal law meat actually has a legal definition.
And Whom established the definitions???
Standards of Identity for Food Products
The Food Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) directs the FDA to establish definitions and standards for food, see
21 U.S.C. §341.
- Paraphrased, the statute states: in an effort to promote honesty and fair dealing for the benefit of consumers, the FDA is authorized to establish by regulation, a common or usual name, a reasonable definition and standard of identity, a reasonable standard of quality, and reasonable standards of fill of the container for any food.
The statute also defines a food as misbranded if there is a standard of identity in the regulation but the food item does not conform to the definition or standard of identity (
21 U.S.C. §343(g)).
Yes, the second paragraph basically says, if there is an established identity, Meat in this case, calling something that does not fit the definition, exactly, is Misbranding and must stop...BUT...It's a Circle. The FDA established the definitions above. The FDA has the power to Change the definition or Toss it completely and rewrite it anyway they wish, or, were " Influenced " to.
The Fed does this kind of thing all the time! There is a Vote to put a Cap on Spending.
Special Interest Groups provide an " Incentive " to fund X,Y and Z Projects...
POOF ! A vote is held and eventually passed, to Lift the Spending Cap!!!
The USDA Guidelines. Dave posted apply as they are based on FDA Regs. The USDA Book outlines the Meat Labeling Rules in a much simpler version than the Labeling Rules posted by the FDA. From the Preface...
PREFACE
The Policy Book is intended to be guidance to help manufacturers and prepare product labels that are truthful and not misleading. Compliance with the requirements set forth in this publication does not, in itself, guarantee an authorization.
The FDA has sole authority to approve or reject Food Labels. The approval process is a huge PITA and it is worth paying a Professional to design your label for a New Product! Been there and gave up...
Be that as it may, the last line of the USDA Introduction is ALL TELLING...
They are subject to change and therefore a periodic updating of this book will take place.
My previous post Over Simplified what could happen. But, the fact remains, IF the Fed wants to change the definition of Meat to include Lab Grown Franken Meat, whether sourced from veggies or animal DNA, they have the power to do it...JJ