The USDA has declared that frozen French fries are now classified as “fresh vegetables.” I seem to recall that ketchup, according to the US government, is also a “vegetable.” A perfect nutritional pair.
http://www.organicconsumers.org/school/frenchfries061604.cfm%5B/url%5D
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Frozen Fries = ‘Fresh Vegetables’!!?
Home » Forums » Outside the box » Fun Stuff » Frozen Fries = ‘Fresh Vegetables’!!?
- This topic has 31 replies, 11 voices, and was last updated 20 years, 10 months ago.
AuthorTopicWSDenGar
AskWoody LoungerJuly 9, 2004 at 6:20 pm #407147Viewing 2 reply threadsAuthorReplies-
WSjhelfer
AskWoody LoungerAugust 2, 2004 at 7:16 pm #858912Well, I don’t know what categories they had available to them , or for what purpose the classification was (nutrition? Storage guidelines? transporation regulations?), but (freedom
) fries are made of potatoes, and ketchup is made mostly of tomato puree, and I reckon those are vegetables.
Jim H
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WSFish
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WSjscher2000
AskWoody Lounger -
WSFafner
AskWoody LoungerAugust 5, 2004 at 5:14 pm #860479How come people always ask whether a given food is a fruit OR a vegetable? How come no one ever asks whether spinach is a leaf or a vegetable? Is a carrot a root or a vegetable? “Fruit” is a botanical designation, referring to a specific part of a plant, just like root, stem, and leaf. “Vegetable” is a culinary designation, referring to how a plant is used in the kitchen and how it is eaten. Some fruits are sweet, but most are not. The following vegetables are all fruits: tomatoes, eggplant, okra, green beans, pumpkin, squash (summer and winter), cucumbers, pea pods, peppers, avocado, ears of corn. Think of it this way: if it has seeds, it’s a fruit. But that doesn’t mean it’s not a vegetable.
Fafner
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 5, 2004 at 6:21 pm #860493 -
WSFafner
AskWoody LoungerAugust 5, 2004 at 9:51 pm #860591You’re right, of course, that “fruit” can be used as both a botanical and a culinary designation. Rhubarb, for example, is not botanically a fruit, it’s a stem. But it is used in desserts as though it were a sweet fruit and is therefore often classified as a fruit for culinary purposes. But when people say that a tomato isn’t a vegetable because it is a fruit, they are forgetting this distinction between culinary and botanical classifications. That was the point I was trying to make. I just find it interesting that people who worry about whether a tomato is a fruit or a vegetable never worry about whether green beans or zucchini or okra is a fruit or vegetable. (Although I suppose there are other reasons to worry about okra.)
Fafner
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WSLawS
AskWoody LoungerAugust 6, 2004 at 12:56 pm #860793 -
WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 6, 2004 at 2:57 pm #861011I find the classification of frozen food as ‘fresh’ mush stranger than the fruit/vegetable problem.
I tried going to the link to see if it mentioned the reasoning behind this (mis)classification but it seems to be down. Or busy. Or something-whatever the cause I couldn’t reach the site right now.
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 6, 2004 at 2:57 pm #861012I find the classification of frozen food as ‘fresh’ mush stranger than the fruit/vegetable problem.
I tried going to the link to see if it mentioned the reasoning behind this (mis)classification but it seems to be down. Or busy. Or something-whatever the cause I couldn’t reach the site right now.
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WSadysin
AskWoody Lounger -
WSFafner
AskWoody Lounger -
WSFafner
AskWoody Lounger -
WSadysin
AskWoody Lounger -
WSLawS
AskWoody LoungerAugust 6, 2004 at 12:56 pm #860794 -
WSFafner
AskWoody LoungerAugust 5, 2004 at 9:51 pm #860592You’re right, of course, that “fruit” can be used as both a botanical and a culinary designation. Rhubarb, for example, is not botanically a fruit, it’s a stem. But it is used in desserts as though it were a sweet fruit and is therefore often classified as a fruit for culinary purposes. But when people say that a tomato isn’t a vegetable because it is a fruit, they are forgetting this distinction between culinary and botanical classifications. That was the point I was trying to make. I just find it interesting that people who worry about whether a tomato is a fruit or a vegetable never worry about whether green beans or zucchini or okra is a fruit or vegetable. (Although I suppose there are other reasons to worry about okra.)
Fafner
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 5, 2004 at 6:21 pm #860494
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WSFafner
AskWoody LoungerAugust 5, 2004 at 5:14 pm #860480How come people always ask whether a given food is a fruit OR a vegetable? How come no one ever asks whether spinach is a leaf or a vegetable? Is a carrot a root or a vegetable? “Fruit” is a botanical designation, referring to a specific part of a plant, just like root, stem, and leaf. “Vegetable” is a culinary designation, referring to how a plant is used in the kitchen and how it is eaten. Some fruits are sweet, but most are not. The following vegetables are all fruits: tomatoes, eggplant, okra, green beans, pumpkin, squash (summer and winter), cucumbers, pea pods, peppers, avocado, ears of corn. Think of it this way: if it has seeds, it’s a fruit. But that doesn’t mean it’s not a vegetable.
Fafner
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WSjscher2000
AskWoody Lounger
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WSFish
AskWoody Lounger
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WSPaulGD
AskWoody Lounger -
WSMickeyMouse
AskWoody LoungerAugust 13, 2004 at 11:54 am #863958Here! Here! Not only is your point well made it is well written. Cudos and my support to you on both counts. The term “Fresh Frozen” belongs right up there with:
1.) “Picked Fresh” for those fruits and veggies (regardless of what you believe belongs in either of these two groupings) that are not locally grown.
2.) “Fresh Baked” for those baked goods that are not baked on premesis.
3.) “Fresh Packed” for those canned items that ….well I just don’t know what they think they are implying here.
I am sure that there are more examples but these are the ones that get me the most.
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 16, 2004 at 8:41 pm #865235I’m not sure what locally grown has to do with your objection to Picked Fresh. Since the phrase refers to the condition at the time of picking, and not at the time of sale, it would be perfectly applicable to both locally grown & non-locally grown produce if it meant anything. But regarding its meaning, please tell me how you could pick something without it being fresh? (That’s not a rhetocical question-some of you have such ingenious imaginations that I can’t wait to see what you come up with.)
IMO Fresh Packed is different from Packed Fresh. Perhaps Fresh Packed would refer to items that are packed on the premises, just like Fresh Baked would? (We have a couple of local packing plants where you can get ‘Fresh Packed’ salmon and it really is Fresh Packed. But I think that’s the exception rather than the rule.)
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 16, 2004 at 8:41 pm #865236I’m not sure what locally grown has to do with your objection to Picked Fresh. Since the phrase refers to the condition at the time of picking, and not at the time of sale, it would be perfectly applicable to both locally grown & non-locally grown produce if it meant anything. But regarding its meaning, please tell me how you could pick something without it being fresh? (That’s not a rhetocical question-some of you have such ingenious imaginations that I can’t wait to see what you come up with.)
IMO Fresh Packed is different from Packed Fresh. Perhaps Fresh Packed would refer to items that are packed on the premises, just like Fresh Baked would? (We have a couple of local packing plants where you can get ‘Fresh Packed’ salmon and it really is Fresh Packed. But I think that’s the exception rather than the rule.)
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WSMickeyMouse
AskWoody LoungerAugust 13, 2004 at 11:54 am #863959Here! Here! Not only is your point well made it is well written. Cudos and my support to you on both counts. The term “Fresh Frozen” belongs right up there with:
1.) “Picked Fresh” for those fruits and veggies (regardless of what you believe belongs in either of these two groupings) that are not locally grown.
2.) “Fresh Baked” for those baked goods that are not baked on premesis.
3.) “Fresh Packed” for those canned items that ….well I just don’t know what they think they are implying here.
I am sure that there are more examples but these are the ones that get me the most.
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WSpatgeorge
AskWoody LoungerAugust 22, 2004 at 6:03 pm #867523Some products such as peas and sweetcorn deteriorate so rapidly when picked, that if frozen within a couple of hours of picking and bought from the freezer cabinet a month later,they are often “fresher” than items a day old bought as “fresh”.
My pet gripe is “home made”. This is often seen on items in supermarkets. Whose home were they made in?
Pat
PS. Can one of you clever graphics types come up with smilies for pedant and smug?
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WSFafner
AskWoody LoungerAugust 23, 2004 at 6:12 pm #867852“Home made” doesn’t bother me. It just means “made on the premises.”
You are right about the frozen vegetables, but they are still not fresh, because fresh means, among other things, never frozen. Freezing also changes the texture of vegetables, so regardless of how fresh they were when frozen, they will not be the same as vegetables that were never frozen.
In addition to the oxymoron “fresh frozen,” the one that gets me is the idiotic “fresh baked.” Can anyone think of a baked good that wasn’t fresh baked when it first came out of the oven? Of course, it may have been on the store shelf for two months, but it was fresh at one time. Good to know!
Fafner
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 23, 2004 at 8:18 pm #867938Of course the term you’re writing about should be ‘freshly baked’. One of the reasons advertisers use such poor grammar is that it turns a meaningful (but dishonest) term into a meaningless one-and questions of honesty don’t apply to meaningless phrases.
And to me, “Home made” should mean made in a home, not just ‘on the premises’. And I think that ‘homemade’ should fall into that meaningless word category I was talking about, but I checked an online dictionary & found it as a word with the same meaning as ‘home made’. I suspect pollution of the English language by advertisers, but if it’s been accepted then I guess I’d just be wasting my time protesting that “it just isn’t right”.
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WSCalvin
AskWoody LoungerAugust 23, 2004 at 8:18 pm #867939Of course the term you’re writing about should be ‘freshly baked’. One of the reasons advertisers use such poor grammar is that it turns a meaningful (but dishonest) term into a meaningless one-and questions of honesty don’t apply to meaningless phrases.
And to me, “Home made” should mean made in a home, not just ‘on the premises’. And I think that ‘homemade’ should fall into that meaningless word category I was talking about, but I checked an online dictionary & found it as a word with the same meaning as ‘home made’. I suspect pollution of the English language by advertisers, but if it’s been accepted then I guess I’d just be wasting my time protesting that “it just isn’t right”.
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WSFafner
AskWoody LoungerAugust 23, 2004 at 6:12 pm #867853“Home made” doesn’t bother me. It just means “made on the premises.”
You are right about the frozen vegetables, but they are still not fresh, because fresh means, among other things, never frozen. Freezing also changes the texture of vegetables, so regardless of how fresh they were when frozen, they will not be the same as vegetables that were never frozen.
In addition to the oxymoron “fresh frozen,” the one that gets me is the idiotic “fresh baked.” Can anyone think of a baked good that wasn’t fresh baked when it first came out of the oven? Of course, it may have been on the store shelf for two months, but it was fresh at one time. Good to know!
Fafner
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WSpatgeorge
AskWoody LoungerAugust 22, 2004 at 6:03 pm #867524Some products such as peas and sweetcorn deteriorate so rapidly when picked, that if frozen within a couple of hours of picking and bought from the freezer cabinet a month later,they are often “fresher” than items a day old bought as “fresh”.
My pet gripe is “home made”. This is often seen on items in supermarkets. Whose home were they made in?
Pat
PS. Can one of you clever graphics types come up with smilies for pedant and smug?
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WSPaulGD
AskWoody Lounger
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