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Rockettes rock Jordan Center

Rockettes rock Jordan Center

November 19, 2009

Penn State laureate, School of Music host high school singers

Penn State laureate, School of Music host high school singers

November 18, 2009

Virsky Ukrainian Dance Company performs at Eisenhower

Virsky Ukrainian Dance Company performs at Eisenhower

November 17, 2009

Students to present major Disney production For The Kids

Students to present major Disney production For The Kids

November 16, 2009

Penn State celebrates Senior Day

Penn State celebrates Senior Day

November 14, 2009

Hershey breaks ground for Children's Hospital

Hershey breaks ground for Children's Hospital

November 13, 2009

Kronos Quartet performs at Eisenhower Auditorium

Kronos Quartet performs at Eisenhower Auditorium

November 10, 2009

Rally in the Valley excites fans

Rally in the Valley excites fans

November 6, 2009

Penn State Greeks strut their Broadway stuff

Penn State Greeks strut their Broadway stuff

November 1, 2009

THON 5K draws thousands

THON 5K draws thousands

November 1, 2009

Jazz masters wow audience

Jazz masters wow audience

October 28, 2009

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2009 State of the University Address

2009 State of the University Address

Behind the scenes with stadium police

Behind the scenes with stadium police

Poultry science professor shares turkey news

Poultry science professor shares turkey news

Penn State Solar Decathlon 2009, part two: Natural Fusion goes to Washington

Penn State Solar Decathlon 2009, part two: Natural Fusion goes to Washington

Natural Fusion, Penn State's Solar Decathlon Team 2009

Natural Fusion, Penn State's Solar Decathlon Team 2009

Behind the scenes with the stadium concessions team

Behind the scenes with the stadium concessions team

Penn State's creamery, from the cow to the cone

Penn State's creamery, from the cow to the cone

Beaver Stadium Behind the Scenes and On the Air

Beaver Stadium Behind the Scenes and On the Air

Beaver Stadium Behind the Scenes: Video Board

Beaver Stadium Behind the Scenes: Video Board

Video gives students sneak peek at new campus location

Video gives students sneak peek at new campus location

Historic Old Main Bell removed from tower for restoration and display

Historic Old Main Bell removed from tower for restoration and display

'Meat is Neat' -- professor of meat science harnesses power of the Web

Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Chris Raines with two steaks. The top one was packaged with a very small mount of carbon monoxide in the package; the bottom one was not. Chris Raines with two steaks. The top one was packaged with a very small mount of carbon monoxide in the package; the bottom one was not.

University Park, Pa. -- The temptation, of course, is to simply dismiss Chris Raines as an odd-duck college professor. After all, who else would have a blog titled "Meat is Neat" and the Twitter handle, "I tweet meat"?

But that would be a mistake, because the extension meats specialist and assistant professor of meat science and technology in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences is a serious scientist on the cutting edge of food technology -- not some misguided meatball obsessed with obscure details about steaks, chops and tenderloins.
 
Raines researches factors that affect meat quality and helps meat processors -- large and small, national and local -- with the quality and safety of the food they produce.
 
"I have chosen to use social networking software over the Internet to get the word out because I feel like there is a lot of misunderstanding and a lot of false or incomplete information circulating about meat," he said. "By using blogs and Twitter, I am trying to reach a younger population outside of agricultural circles that we may otherwise miss with our educational efforts in Penn State Cooperative Extension."
 
Raines has done research you can sink your teeth into on using carbon monoxide in packaging meat to preserve color, extend shelf life and slow spoilage. A blog entry he posted recently on the subject, titled "What a Gas! Packaging Meat in Carbon Monoxide," is typical of his efforts to inform about meat.
 
"Packaging meat in carbon monoxide (CO) has its perks, yet it is likely that public sentiment toward packaging fresh meat in carbon monoxide is anything but positive, even though the level of CO is miniscule," he wrote. "Researchers have found the use of CO in fresh-meat packaging to be an effective way to prolong the meat's shelf-life before its microbial and sensory quality deteriorates."
 
"When meat is packaged for display in retail self-serve cases, the atmosphere within the actual package can be altered to minimize oxidative deterioration, retard microbial growth and improve product appearance."
 
Each year, according to Raines, retailers throw away a lot of good ground beef and other meats because they just don't look good. He believes that the retail cost of meat could be reduced if carbon monoxide was used in packaging. "Less meat would need to be produced because less would be tossed out and wasted," he wrote in his blog. "I think these are valid points in defending the use of CO."
 
The "Meat is Neat" blog follows Raines' experiences and thoughts about meat as food -- where it comes from, how it's produced, how people consume it and the health implications of it. Some entries are highly technical, and others are total stream of consciousness. Some posts address hot-button topics facing meat today, while others address long-term ideas or speculative ideas about meat in the future.
 
In a recent blog entry titled "Burgeoning Questions about Beef, and the Questions They Raise" Raines examines the continuing controversy over food safety, especially as it pertains to meat.
 
"I have paid special attention to the popular press' recent hammering of ground beef," he wrote. "The U.S. ground beef production cycle and U.S. meat-inspection system have been heavily questioned due to the inability of the meat industry to completely eliminate E. coli O157:H7 -- which may be next to impossible to do."
 
"I’ve kept quiet on this to think about what's going on here. But I still have to wonder why food-safety inspection is so often synonymous with meat inspection. Why is beef getting the bad rap? Why not leafy greens -- or any of the raw fruits and vegetables we consume, which are also vectors for foodborne illness?
 
"Why do we think life is so pure as to expect sterile raw foods? Why are food-safety expectations different among food types?"
 
If you, too, think meat is neat, and would like to read Chris Raines' blog about meat science and muscle foods, go to http://meatisneat.wordpress.com/ online. Or, if you want to discuss issues involving meat, ask questions or follow him on Twitter, send him an e-mail at craines@psu.edu.
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