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    Watch It Yourself

    The real reason McDonald's finally dropped the pink slime (for strong stomachsonly)

    Whitney Radley
    Jan 31, 2012 | 11:11 pm
    The real reason McDonald's finally dropped the pink slime (for strong stomachsonly)
    play icon

    It's a victory for healthy food crusaders everywhere: Following the lead of Taco Bell and Burger King, McDonald's will no longer use "pink slime" in its burger recipe.

    The purveyors of the Big Mac have decided to discontinue the use of Beef Products, Inc. ingredient, a move that has many crediting British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver.

    Oliver demonstrated the process for making the aptly-named "pink slime" to a disgusted, horrified audience.

    During an infamous episode of Jamie's Food Revolution, ​Oliver demonstrated the process for making the aptly-named "pink slime" to a disgusted, horrified audience.

    The product starts with trimmings, bits of sinew and meat deemed otherwise inedible. These scraps are put into a centrifuge to separate fat from meat, washed in a solution of water and ammonium hydroxide to remove E. coli, Salmonella and other bacteria, then minced.

    Et voilà! You have a "filler," allowed to make up a component (usually no more than 25 percent) of ground meat sold in the United States. The product was common in fast food and school cafeteria meals, until now.

    Whether or not Oliver was the impetus for the decision — a McDonald's spokesperson denied that Oliver's show influenced the company's removal of BPI products — his goal of raising awareness about America's eating habits and igniting "a chain reaction of positive change across the country" is on its way to fruition.

    Now that the ingredient list is free from "pink slime," will you be more likely to order and eat a fast food burger?

    unspecified
    news/restaurants-bars

    visiting popup bagels

    A highly opinionated take on Houston's venture-backed new bagel shop

    Eric Sandler
    Jun 18, 2026 | 5:10 pm
    PopUp Bagels
    Courtesy of PopUp Bagels
    Houstonians are lining up to try PopUp Bagels.

    It’s hard to remember the last restaurant opening with as much fanfare as PopUp Bagels. Houstonians lined up in the heat for the bakery’s grand opening on Saturday, June 13.

    Shawn the Food Sheep included a glimpse of the line in his review below.


    View this post on Instagram
    A post shared by Shawn Singh (@shawnthefoodsheep)


    Eager to see what the fuss is all about, I stopped by around 10 am on Thursday, June 18. Thankfully, only about a dozen people stood in line ahead of me, and I had a bag of six bagels in less than 20 minutes.

    The frequency with which it boils and bakes it bagels sets PopUp Bagels apart from Houston’s traditional, mostly family-owned bagel shops. Instead of making large batches early in the morning that may get refreshed once or twice per day, PopUp Bagels is constantly boiling and baking smaller batches of a couple dozen bagels at a time throughout its operating hours. That's why customers will hear the cry of “hot bagels” echoing through the small, counter-service space every time more emerge from the oven.

    PopUp is different from traditional bagel shops in a couple of other important ways. First, the menu only list five varieties — plain, poppy, salt, sesame, and everything, which is topped with poppy seeds, salt, and sesame seeds. And, it only serves whole bagels — no slicing or toasting. The store’s motto of “grip, rip, and dip” explains how it expects customers to consume their bagels. Packaged lox are available, but diners have to assemble the sandwich themselves — either off-site or at one of the couple of cafe tables outside.

    PopUp Bagels also doesn’t sell individual bagels. Instead, diners must order a minimum of three bagels and a schmear — various cream cheese and butters are available — for $15. Six bagels and a schmear costs $24. A dozen bagels and two schmears is $46. As a point of comparison, the Bagel Shop Bakery in Bellaire charges $25 for 13 bagels and two, 8-ounce schmears.

    So, how is it?

    Fresh, hot bagels are inherently superior to hours-old bagels. That’s a real advantage for PopUp Bagels. On my visit, the fresh-from-the-oven plain bagels were so hot that they needed a couple of minutes before we could "grip and rip" them.

    As for the bagels themselves, they certainly look the part. The outside is deeply caramelized with an even distribution of toppings that adhere well to the exterior.

    But the biggest shortcoming is texture. Bagels, obviously, are supposed to be chewy, but all six of the bagels that an ex-pat New Yorker friend and I ordered walked the line between chewy and underbaked. That may be deliberate, as softer bagels are easier to “grip and rip.”

    It's also possible that the bakery’s new employees are still dialing in procedures, and that a different day would yield bagels with a crispier texture. Colloquially, friends who have also visited the shop — both in Houston and other cities — disagreed with my assessment of the texture.

    The plain is just that, with a very mild flavor. Both the scallion cream cheese and salted butter had a pleasantly creamy texture and boosted the dining experience.

    Overall, PopUp is competitive with Houston’s best bagels. That’s promising, since Stripes — the equity growth firm that bought PopUp Bagels in 2023 — has announced plans to open more than 300 locations nationwide.

    But you won’t see me driving half an hour or standing in a long line to get another taste. Houston’s locally-owned bagel shops are more convenient, less expensive, and just as good.

    PopUp Bagels

    Courtesy of PopUp Bagels

    Houstonians are lining up to try PopUp Bagels.

    openingsnews-you-can-eatbreakfastpopup bagels
    news/restaurants-bars

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