Page 238 - How to Be a Conscious Eater - Making Food Choices That Are Good for You
P. 238

Absence of antibiotics in the meat supply. If you’re dining at a restau-
                    rant or food-service venue that doesn’t specify on the menu or
                    in-store marketing materials whether the meat served comes
                    from animals raised without medically important antibiotics,
                    don’t be shy about asking your server or at the counter. Think
                    that’s too awkward to be realistic? Here’s a hypothetical scene:
                    “Excuse me, is the burger/carnitas burrito/kung pao chicken
                    made from animals raised without antibiotics?” “Uh . . . I don’t
                    know.” “OK—would you mind asking the manager? Thanks!”
                    Even if the manager doesn’t have the answer for you on the
                    spot, you can leave feeling good about having done your part
                    to help normalize this kind of transparency. If enough con-
                    scious eaters ask, it’ll become standard practice to disclose
                    this information in-store or on the company website. And then
                    you won’t have to ask anymore; your future self thanks you for
                    enduring a possibly awkward moment.
                       Each year, in conjunction with other research and advocacy
                    groups, Consumer Reports releases  an antibiotic scorecard,
                    “Chain Reaction,” evaluating the largest fast food and fast
                    casual  brands  in  America.  Beef  production  takes  up  40  per-
                    cent of the antibiotics important to human medicine that are
                    used by the overall meat industry, whereas chicken takes up
                    just 6 percent. Given beef’s large antibiotic footprint, in 2018
                    Consumer Reports began releasing a separate scorecard just
                    for burger joints. Consult both scorecards before selecting a
                    chain restaurant. (You can find them at consumerreports.org.)
                       On the 2018 burger scorecard, a mere two of the top
                    twenty-five burger chains in America—BurgerFi and Shake
                    Shack—got A grades, meaning 100 percent of the beef they
                    serve is raised without the routine use of antibiotics. More dis-
                    turbing,  twenty-two  of the remaining twenty-three got an  F
                    grade, meaning they have no substantial antibiotic-reduction




                               Stuff that’s made in restaurant kitchens  227





          Conscious Eater_04 PT_4th patches.indd   227                      10/23/19   1:38 PM
   233   234   235   236   237   238   239   240   241   242   243