Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

How McDonald's chicken nuggets are made

McDonald's is testing a new recipe for its Chicken McNuggets.

Hayley Peterson
Wednesday 11 May 2016 17:15 BST
Comments

McDonald's is testing a new recipe for its Chicken McNuggets.

The recipe strips the nuggets of artificial preservatives and contains more recognizable ingredients like lemon-juice solids and rice starch.

The chain is changing the nuggets so "parents can feel good" about feeding them to their kids, McDonald's spokeswoman Becca Hary said.

"More than ever, customers care about where their food comes from and how it is prepared," she said.

The recipe may be changing, but the preparation and cooking process for the nuggets will stay the same.

McDonald's Canada made a video depicting this process from inside a Cargill factory that makes and freezes the nuggets before sending them to McDonald's restaurants for consumption.

Here's how the nuggets are made, according to the video:


Here's a photo of so-called pink goop that often gets associated with McNuggets. "We don't know what it is or where it came from, but it has nothing to do with our Chicken McNuggets," says Nicoletta Stefou, the supply-chain manager at McDonald's Canada.


The process of making McNuggets starts in the "deboning department" with whole chickens.


"First, we separate all of the chicken cuts and set aside the chicken breast meat for the Chicken McNuggets," says Jen Rabideau, a product-development scientist for Cargill.


Workers trim the chicken breasts of fat and send them along an assembly line.


The chicken breasts that have been separated are collected into this bin.


The cart of chicken-breast meat travels across the factory to the "blending room."


Here, the chicken is pushed into the blending room, which is essentially a giant chamber that will transport it to the blender.


Inside the blending room, the cart of chicken breasts is lifted off the ground.


The meat is then dumped into the grinder.


The mashed-up meat pours out of the grinder and straight into the blender.


Inside the blender, the ground chicken meat is mixed with some seasonings and chicken skin for flavoring.


The meat is removed from the blender, and Stefou points out that there's no pink goop to be found.


But they aren't McNuggets yet, so let's check out how the rest of the process works.


In the "forming room," the blended chicken meat is portioned into the four chicken McNugget shapes: the ball, the bell, the boot, and the bow tie.


Then the nuggets travel down the assembly line to be covered in a light batter, which is shown in the center of this photo.


After being dipped in the light batter, they are covered in a second, thicker batter called tempura.


The chicken nuggets come out on the other side looking a bit like sugar cookies before they are sent into a fryer.


The nuggets come out of the fryer looking ready to eat, but they have been only partially cooked.


Breaking a fried nugget in half, you can see that it's a bit raw inside. The nuggets will now be frozen and sent to McDonald's restaurants, where they will be fully cooked.


The frozen nuggets are bagged, boxed, and prepared for shipping.


This is how the nuggets look when they arrive at a McDonald's restaurant.


Finally, the boxes are marked for shipping and the process of making Chicken McNuggets is complete.


Check out the full video below:

Read more:

• 13 useful life hacks you can learn in a minute
• Why Microsoft's chatbot turned into a racist
• Everyone is worried that the China bubble will pop

Read the original article on Business Insider UK. © 2015. Follow Business Insider UK on Twitter.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in