Health | pink slime Governors Defend Pink Slime by Eating It In attempt to combat 'unwarranted food scare' By Rob Quinn Posted Mar 29, 2012 2:29 AM CDT Copied Taking out the "pink slime" filler will lead to fattier, more expensive ground beef, the meat industry warns. (AP Photo/Jim Cole) Pink slime is perfectly safe to eat, but it has a bit of a PR problem, according to federal authorities and a coalition of at least four governors. Department of Agriculture officials say the "slime"—leftover beef trimmings sometimes treated with ammonium hydroxide—is actually a low-cost way of making ground beef leaner, and has been unfairly labeled, reports the Wall Street Journal. The additive has been used for nearly 20 years, but supermarkets have started taking it off their shelves under pressure from the public. Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad are among the governors who plan to eat the stuff the meat industry calls "lean, finely textured beef" themselves after touring a plant in Nebraska today, BusinessWeek reports. "You effectively need to kill 1.5 million more head of cattle a year to replace the meat that would go off the market from this unwarranted, unmerited food scare," Branstad says. "That's why we're pushing back on it." Read These Next Need a solid 'air hack'? Book your flight on this day. An armed man was shot and killed at Mar-a-Lago. Mexico's missing count is moving in the wrong direction. After Trump's dig, Denmark announces rescue. Report an error