The ZimmCast is done and this week you can listen to interviews with Joel Jaeger, founder of Your Farm and Ken McCauley, NCGA president. Joel just launched Your Farm, the coolest online community for farmers and with it he’s made available the USDA/FAS 1614 Farm Subsidy Database which you can search.
ZimmComm freelance reporter Mike Rogers actually did the interviews for me this week. In his interview with Joel you’ll hear about why he’s started Your Farm and put the database online. Then in the interview he did with Ken we hear a grower’s take on putting the farm subsidy database online and what he thinks about having a new place for farmers to gather online.
This week’s ending song is “The Peace Within” by Barry McCabe which you can find on the Podsafe Music Network.
You can download and listen to the ZimmCast here:
ZimmCast 119 (25 min MP3)
Or listen to this week’s ZimmCast right now:
zimmcast119-5-17-07.mp3The ZimmCast is the official weekly podcast of AgWired which you can subscribe to using the link in our sidebar. You can also subscribe in iTunes.

Dr. Keith Belk, professor at Colorado State University’s Center for Red Meat Quality and Safety, provided that information for the ag editors attending the
The
Individual booths, red lights to mask colors, positive pressure ventilation to keep out unwanted smells and pass-through sample presentation doors – that’s the environment where trained sensory panelists do their work at the 
We also got to go “backstage” to the prep area and see how they prepare the samples – on George Foreman grills to heat both sides at the same time to the exact desired temperature. Pretty nifty. Then we got to see how they cored meat samples and checked them for tenderness with the shear method. All very interesting. Real sensory panelists don’t get to see behind the scenes, so we felt very special!
How difficult could it be to figure out whether a piece of meat is tough or tender, dry or juicy, flavorful or not? A group of ag journalists found out this week as guests of
Anyway, then we moved on to learning how to evaluate little bits of meat for tenderness and juiciness. Before doing everything we had to eat a bite of non-salted cracker and swish some water around in our mouths to cleanse our palates. When we ate each bite of meat, we had to use a toothpick and place it back between our molars.
When it comes to testing food, it’s all the senses that count, not just taste.
Designing trials for a new animal health product to evaluate meat quality is expensive and complicated, according to Dr. Floyd McKeith with the University of Illinois Department of Animal Sciences. He was one of the speakers at a workshop for ag editors this week in Ames, Iowa sponsored by
Bringing an animal health product to market requires a lot of testing – not just on how that product affects the animal, but also how it affects the meat that comes from that animal.
I know I just wrote about the introduction of