Your reading list

Horse meat found in canned beef at two UK retailers: food agency

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: October 31, 2013

, ,

LONDON, Oct 31 (Reuters) – A batch of canned sliced beef containing horse meat has been removed from the shelves of retailers Home Bargains and Quality Save, Britain’s Food Standards Agency said on Thursday .

Routine tests by local government trading standards officers in Lincolnshire, eastern England, found the product, which was manufactured in Romania in January this year, contained horse DNA at a level of between 1 and 5 percent.

“Horse meat is not identified in the ingredients list and therefore it should not have been present in the product,” the agency said in a statement.

Read Also

(Photo courtesy Canada Beef Inc.)

Feed Grains Weekly: Price likely to keep stepping back

As the harvest in southern Alberta presses on, a broker said that is one of the factors pulling feed prices lower in the region. Darcy Haley, vice-president of Ag Value Brokers in Lethbridge, added that lower cattle numbers in feedlots, plentiful amounts of grass for cattle to graze and a lacklustre export market also weighed on feed prices.

Neither Home Bargains, the trading name of family-owned business TJ Morris, nor Quality Save, a chain of discount stores operating in northern England, could immediately be reached for comment.

The beef tested negative for the drug phenylbutazone, or ‘bute’, the anti-inflammatory painkiller for sporting horses which is banned for animals intended for eventual human consumption as it is potentially harmful, the agency said.

A scandal broke around Europe in January when traces of horse were found in frozen burgers sold in Irish and British supermarkets, including those run by market leader Tesco .

Markets at a glance

explore

Stories from our other publications