| | Beware - Fake Eggs May Hit Our Markets ,, Another Chinese Stupid Fake Product Thursday, 27 August 2009 - 2:02 PM SL Time | | |
Hope Images and aticle comes out properly,,,,, I`m taking them from a PDF file
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Fake Egg in market in China- BEWARE
Cases of problem foods and food poisoning are widely reported in Mainland China over the last few years. In 2001, there were 185 cases of food poisoning, affecting about 15,715 people and causing 146 deaths. The cases doubled in 2002. In 2003, the number of reported cases was ten times more than that in 2001, and the number of people suffered was as high as 29,660, including 262 deaths Now In Sept 2008 Nearly 53,000 Chinese children sick from contaminated milk 4 have died
Manufacturing fake eggs
In China there are fake schools and classes that teach a variety of blatant fraud technology, even eggs can be modulated by chemical materials, but also be able to fry cook, is currently the most popular False course.
Step 1 modulation of raw materials
Using 7 kinds of chemical materials, see the pic
Fake egg was made from calcium carbonate, starch, resin, gelatin, alum and other chemical products.
Step 2 egg production
Raw egg into the mold to 2 / 3 full, put calcium chloride, colouring die, the egg appears on the film been announced.
The `yolk` is shaped in the round mould. `Magic water` containing calcium chloride is used.
By adding a yellow pigment and become raw egg yolk.
Step 3 fake egg shape
In the mold into 1 / 3 raw egg white, like the first package, like dumplings into the egg yolk, egg white into another, into the magic water, a shell eggs will come slowly. Naked egg shape to 1 hour to dry after washing with water, at shells ready.
Step 4
Sewing lines through the use of eggs, immersed in paraffin wax, calcium carbonate, such as modulation of the eggshell into a solution, repeated several times until the shell a little dry, immersion in cold water pumping line shape, this point, the egg has been put on a false cloak , You`re done.
Hard shells are formed by soaking in paraffin wax onto the egg, which are then left to dry.
Oh yeah The Egg is ready. The artificial egg shell is very fragile and break easily but who cares!! Look so real
Many small bubbles is formed during frying the egg but not many people can tell the difference. The egg look exactly the same, and the eggs taste better than real but you are adding to the statistic of food poisoning person.
Why make fake eggs ? Because of money. The cost of fake egg is only 0.55 Yuan/kg, while the true eggs` market price is 5.6 Yuan/kg.
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Its V.Important
Hope this is useful (not to produce eggs),,, but to notify people,,, Pls spread out |
Source(s) PDF forwarded by a friend |
Ramz Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 7871 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 07:06:02 GMT Report for Abuse
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Footnote for picture 9 & 10 altered......
Pls spread out....
we have businessmen without hearts in SL,,,, some of them may import such products to SL to poison people and make money.....
you may save a life
God Bless you |
Ramz Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 7871 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 07:12:41 GMT Report for Abuse
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| If you need the original PDF file to forward,,, provide me an email add here,,, I'll pass it to you ASAP |
zaharan Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2006 Posts: 5511 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 07:22:55 GMT Report for Abuse
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Ramz,
Unbelievable development, but as far as our people are concerned I think they are smart enough to identify the real product, especially when all of a sudden there is a price change.
Thanks for sharing. |
ThinKing Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2006 Posts: 5994 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 07:24:08 GMT Report for Abuse
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Sorry Ramz! :)
http://www.hoax-slayer.com/fake-eggs-china.shtml
According to this email forward, large quantities of counterfeit chicken eggs are being manufactured in China and then sold in markets for around half the price of real eggs. The message claims that the fake eggs are created from a range of ingredients, including gelatin, benzoic acid, coagulating material, alum and 'magic water'. It also warns that eating the fake eggs could eventually cause dementia because of the alum used in their manufacture.
Versions of the story have been posted on various blogs and forums and have circulated via email for several years. The story gained even more attention after it was published on Consumerist.com in May 2007. Consumerist.com based the story on a report in the 'Internet Journal of Toxicology'. However, an article on the What Tian Has Learned blog discusses the story in depth and concludes that it is a hoax. A reader of the article contacted the editor of 'Internet Journal of Toxicology', who replied that the original story, along with another dubious tale by the same author, were 'published online by mistake' in the Journal and later removed.
The Consumerist.com article links to an archived version of the original report, but it appears that the Internet Journal of Toxicology has used a robots.txt file to block the 'Fake Eggs' story and other previously published articles from appearing in the Internet archive. An update to the Consumerist article acknowledges that the story may be a hoax.
Rumours about artificial eggs in China possibly originated from a 2004 Chinese news article. According to a (roughly translated) Xinhua News Agency article published on December 28 2004, a mobile street vendor sold a Handan resident an egg that turned out to be 'man-made'. Examination revealed that the fake egg was made from calcium carbonate, starch, resin, gelatin and other chemical products. The article includes a photograph supposedly showing one of the fake eggs along side a real egg. However, there is no way of telling from the photograph if one of the eggs is fake or not. Moreover, although I did locate a few vague and unsubstantiated references, I could find no other credible reports confirming such incidents.
Never the less, it cannot be ruled out that such an incident did occur as described. But even if it did happen, there is no evidence to suggest that making and selling artificial eggs in China is a widespread and well-documented practice that is so advanced that it even has fake egg production classes available. If true, it seems quite likely that such an interesting story would have garnered the attention of various news outlets around the world.
It should be noted that the egg described in the Xinhua News Agency article was quickly revealed as fake during cooking because the yolk and white ran together, the egg stayed very hard after boiling and it did not smell like a real egg. In contrast, the fake eggs described in later versions of the tale claim that they can be cooked like real eggs and even taste very much the same. It seems highly improbable that an 'egg' made from a concoction of chemical substances, including alum, would taste and smell anything like a real egg.
Moreover, the method of fake egg production described seems quite labour-intensive. After factoring in the cost of ingredients and the time spent on production, it is difficult to believe that fake eggs could be profitably sold at half the price of real eggs. In general, the motivation for creating fake products for sale is that the fakes can be produced at a fraction of the cost of the genuine article, thereby generating an easy profit. In this case, such a profit seems unlikely.
Incidentally, alum does have food related uses, including hardening gelatin and is indeed dangerous, or even fatal, to humans if consumed in more than very small amounts. And aluminum has been linked to Alzheimer's disease.
Perhaps unscrupulous vendors in China have attempted to palm off fake, and probably inedible, eggs as the real thing from time to time. But claims about a well-organized and widespread fake egg market in China seem dubious. Of course, stories that seem too weird to be true sometimes do turn out to be based on fact after all. However, at least until more evidence is forthcoming, I'd be consuming this particular egg tale with a grain of salt.
Edited By - ThinKing - 27 Aug 2009 07:29:02 GMT |
Roshan2007
Joined: Dec 2006 Posts: 3807 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 07:24:19 GMT Report for Abuse
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Somebody told me about fake eggs.
I did not believe it first.
Egg is one of cheapest food you can find, if somebody to make a fake egg it may cost more than a real egg.
But China anything is possible.
advise is never buy any food items made in China. |
Ramz Senior Member
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27 Aug 2009 07:33:47 GMT Report for Abuse
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but as far as our people are concerned I think they are smart enough to identify the real product, especially when all of a sudden there is a price change.
dont' be so optimistic Zaha...... we can't understand our peoples mindset,,,,, they may stock in bulk when such price change occurs
Thinking
no worries mate...... thanx for giving the link
Egg is one of cheapest food you can find, if somebody to make a fake egg it may cost more than a real egg.
check the last part of article.... it cost just 10% of the real egg
advise is never buy any food items made in China.
yes,, that is the best option....... |
ThinKing Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2006 Posts: 5994 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 07:41:53 GMT Report for Abuse
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advise is never buy any food items made in China.
yes,, that is the best option.......
I can see some people smiling already! :) |
MarkLevinson Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2006 Posts: 26651 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 08:02:15 GMT Report for Abuse
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Sorry Ramz! :)
you beat me to it:):):):)
next thing somebody will create a hoax about chinese selling deuterium in Evian bottles :):):):):):):) |
Ramz Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 7871 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 08:06:21 GMT Report for Abuse
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ML...
chinese may do anything to make money out of it mate..... they are just good at it... |
Ramz Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 7871 Member Profile
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27 Aug 2009 08:55:02 GMT Report for Abuse
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hi guyz,,,,, please join
Ramz would like you to join a League in the game 'Sri Lanka Tri-Series' at Cricinfo Fantasy Cricket.
To join the league,
Step 1: Go to Cricinfo Fantasy Cricket
Step 2: Login with your Cricinfo ID (you will need to register if you do not have one)
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Step 6: You are now a member of the league - all set to play Cricinfo Fantasy Cricket
Your Unique Invitation Code:
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Looking forward to have you as part of the league |
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