In the FnC thread, someone posted a link to a giant FnC competition in Bournemouth. One of the teams used a 6-ft. halibut, but the other assembled a larger 'fish' from smaller fish glued together, presumably using transglutaminase meat glue. I know we've discussed meat glue, before, but does anyone besides me find this a little scary?
I'm allergic to beef. I depend on pork, poultry, fish and shellfish being what they are - not beef protein. I first learned about meat glue after eating a 'scallop' that turned out to be scallop bits held together with beef plasma protein. It nearly put me in the hospital. It came in a bag labeled "Frozen Scallops" and it never occurred to me that I had to check the label of a bag of frozen scallops for the presence of beef protein.
How does this tie in to sausage? Len Poli's site has a recipe for a coarse pork sausage that uses transglutaminase to hold the chunks of pork together. It seems like meat glue is creeping into every corner of the meat, poultry and seafood markets. Soon, I'm afraid it's going to get to the point that I'll have to produce all of my own meat products and catch my own fish to be sure that it won't put me on the floor from being cross-contaminated with beef.