Latest News:  

English>>Life & Culture

Is this safe to eat? That's the question (2)

By Ye Jun  (China Daily)

08:20, January 10, 2013

"To solve the problem, China must go to the source of the problem - the farmers. There is not much restaurants can do about supply sources."

Bian Jiang, secretary general of the China Cuisine Association, says major safety issues have mainly occurred within the food industry, not within the restaurant industry, and most problems occur at the food processing stage.

He says restaurant-goers are now more sophisticated and informed.

"Last year when there was a problem with hotpots, nobody ate hotpots any more," he says. "The restaurant industry had to respond with stricter quality control on the ingredients they source. People should trust the government to do the right thing in this area."

For most restaurants, they will sidestep an ingredient if there is even a suspicion on its safety standards, even though it may raise costs.

China's food and hygiene administration has tightened control on additives and illegal preservatives with strict and frequent checks, according to Bian.

He says food safety is not as much a problem as escalating food costs in the last year. Other operation costs have also skyrocketed, including labor, rental and taxes.

We recommend:

Rare photos of Shaolin monks revealed

Breath-taking moments of top female stars

A romantic proposal during Xiamen marathon

Mouth-watering! Tasty breakfast around world

Top 20 Chinese beauties favored by netizens

How sweet! Look at these adorable angels

2012's top 10 cinematic sensations

Top 10 China fashion moments 2012

2012's most hilarious photos of cute animals

【1】 【2】

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:高奕楠、叶欣)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. PLA Special Forces in field training

  2. Mechanized infantry division in drills

  3. Selected Xinhua int'l news pictures(II)

  4. Immigrant workers begin to go home

  5. Why NEEP so popular in China?

  6. China is Asia's top investment destination

  7. Why live on the edge when you can jump off It?

  8. Christmas in China

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Salaries stifled amid sluggish exports
  2. China to surpass U.S. by 2049: report
  3. Proposed Beijing law seeks data on charities
  4. 2012: turning point for Chinese swimming
  5. Debate rages online: Bribes or donations?
  6. Proposed labor camp reform wins online support
  7. Cold War mentality fuels US prejudice
  8. Fewer satisfied with their lives in 2012
  9. Enlightenment from a 'millionaire' cleaner
  10. Is there hope for Chinese football?

What’s happening in China

This group of photos engrave the "past" left far behind us. For some, we may not even have chance to say goodbye.

  1. Rain, snow to sweep S China
  2. Southern China tested by record cold temps
  3. Debate rages online: Bribes or donations?
  4. Chinese companies want more staff
  5. Yum! Brands sales in China hit by govt probe