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posted by cmn32480 on Sunday November 06 2016, @10:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the people-eating-tasty-animals dept.

The Christian Science Monitor reports

Nashville residents who dropped by their local Arby's beginning [the week of November 2] could try the restaurant's limited-time-only venison, or deer meat, sandwich, which the fast-food chain debuted in commemoration of the beginning of deer hunting season.

[...] Many of the Arby's locations that are selling the sandwich are located in more populous or urban areas rather than rural areas where one might expect people to hunt. But Evan Heusinkveld, the president and CEO of the Sportsmen's Alliance, tells The Christian Science Monitor that the urban population is exactly the group that should have the opportunity to try venison.

"Many people who live in the country either have their own freezer of venison or know somebody who hunts", he says, "Selling to city dwellers is exactly what the hunting community would love to see."

While Arby's venison is sourced from farm-raised deer in New Zealand due to USDA rules against serving wild-harvested meat, it will still give customers a taste of what they're missing. The sandwich features a juicy venison steak, crispy onions, and juniper berry sauce.

Arby's venison sandwiches will be offered in just 17 locations in six states (Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Georgia) during deer season, with the promotion ending the Monday after Thanksgiving.

So far, the company says the sandwich has been a big hit.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday November 07 2016, @10:16AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday November 07 2016, @10:16AM (#423426) Journal
    Wild deer can't be harvested for public consumption. The huge problem as I understand it is no control over disease (which as you note is a big problem of an overpopulation of deer).
  • (Score: 2) by canopic jug on Monday November 07 2016, @10:38AM

    by canopic jug (3949) Subscriber Badge on Monday November 07 2016, @10:38AM (#423438) Journal
    Other countries allow it, but they appear to have a better health and safety inspection apparatus as well as better compliance. What would it take for the US corporate culture to be changed enough to produce safe food let alone safely harvest wild food?
    --
    Money is not free speech. Elections should not be auctions.
    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday November 07 2016, @05:11PM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday November 07 2016, @05:11PM (#423608) Journal

      What would it take for the US corporate culture to be changed enough to produce safe food let alone safely harvest wild food?

      A regulator to approve it. That's all that is required from "US corporate culture".