We warned at the time that the ill-conceived Food Safety Modernization
Act (FSMA) of 2011 would tend to choke off many non-industrial food
sources. Now the FDA, interpreting FSMA as part of its regulatory
process, is moving to ban
the aging of cheese on wooden boards,
a process that dates back thousands of years and has been practiced
safely by many of the world’s finest cheese makers. The agency
apparently intends to apply the same standard to imported cheese as
well, which means that in addition to devastating artisanal cheese
producers in this country, the move would cut off Americans’ access to
large numbers of classic European cheeses, many of which, like Comte
and Reblochon, “are required to be aged on wood by their standard of
identity.” [
Jeanne
Carpenter, Cheese Underground (Wisconsin); Matt Spiegler, Cheese Notes]
by WALTER OLSON on JUNE 9, 2014
Our coverage of FSMA, including its many-sided impact on traditional
and artisanal farm and food practice, is
here.
Next, the FDA will propose a regulation for the correct way of cutting the cheese. There, I got to say it first....
ReplyDeleteMon Deux! Why must we different from the Europeans? Their sanitation standards are legendary. And it not like anybody has every been made ill by diseased milk products.
ReplyDeleteAnd in Switzerland, they've got the garbage police.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-04/swiss-garbage-police-irk-foreigners-reeling-after-vote.html
oy vey ole'
That reminds me: I need to buy more AK ammo.
ReplyDeleteKim