Media exposure forces
government to respond
to hair-into-soy sauce scandal
Shanghai. (Interfax-China) — The Chinese government has
shown an unusually high level of concern as a result of a
bold media exposure towards a scandal in which human hair
was used to make soy sauce. The government has now ordered
an immediate inspection of all domestic food seasoning
plants before the end of January.
China Central Television (CCTV), the state television
station, first raised public worries over the quality of
domestic soy sauce by uncovering a substandard workshop in
central China's Hubei Province, where piles of waste human
hair were found. The hairs were treated in special
containers to distill amino acid, the most common substance
contained in soybean sauce.
Human hair is rich in protein content, just like soybean,
wheat and bran, the conventional and legally accepted raw
ingredients for the production of soy sauce.
The plant, describing itself as a bioengineering company,
made around 100,000 tons of amino acid daily, in either
syrup or powder form, making it easier for delivery, plant
workers said. They were then distributed to diluting plants
in or near the province, where it was diluted with
approximately ten times water, was then made into ready-for-use
soy sauce and was bottled or packaged.
In one such plant shown on the CCTV program, more chemical
additives were poured into the amino acid syrup and heated
and stirred continuously by a worker.
The additives include one whole bag of solid hydroxide to
make the sauce taste better, and bottles of hydrochloric
acid to balance the acid and alkali content in the mixture
in order to make it safer for human consumption. Both
additives were for industrial use only, according to their
packaging.
By producing soy sauce from such raw materials, the
producers were said able to cut costs by half. Workers
employed at the plants, however, never bought soy sauce
marked as "blended" on the packaging, because that usually
meant that human hair was the basic material in the sauce.
Soy sauce made from human hair is not the first low-quality
food product exposed by state television, which launched a
program called "Weekly Quality Report" around half a year
ago. The program, which conducts investigations into the low
quality of some of China's most common food products, has
frequently ruined the public appetite.
In related news the Beijing Star Daily reported the Beijing
government has begun closer monitoring and supervision of 14
kinds of foods, including rice, meat, vegetables, bottled
water, dairy products and cooking oil due to fears of large-scale
food-poisoning cases.
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