
Let us start at the very beginning, because the word "chicken" in chicken nugget is doing an enormous amount of heavy lifting. Most parents assume that when they buy a bag of chicken nuggets, they are getting roughly the same thing they would get if they cooked a piece of chicken breast at home — just in a fun shape with a crispy coating. That assumption is not just wrong. It is dangerously wrong. The reality of what goes into a mass-produced children's chicken nugget is something that most food scientists, pediatric nutritionists, and public health researchers find deeply troubling.When researchers at the University of Mississippi Medical Center published a study examining the actual composition of chicken nuggets purchased from two major fast food chains, they found that genuine muscle meat — the kind you would recognize as actual chicken — accounted for less than fifty percent of the total content in at least one of the samples. The rest of the composition included fat, blood vessels, nerves, connective tissue, and bone fragments, all processed together into a smooth paste. That paste is what forms the interior of many commercially produced nuggets. This is not a fringe finding. It is a well-documented reality of how mechanically separated chicken works, and it is at the heart of the nugget manufacturing process.
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