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Summer and Steaks Sizzle at Third Annual Food & Wine Festival

Beef checkoff serves 10,000 tenderloin samples during two-day festival.
The beef checkoff made its debut at the third annual Food & Wine Festival at National Harbor® last weekend in Maryland. Thousands of food and wine lovers enjoyed the two-day event, which offered world-class opportunities to learn about the latest food and beverage trends in a beautiful and unique setting along the Potomac River, just south of Washington, DC.
Visitors followed their noses to the beef checkoff tent, where Mike and James Brannon of Roseda Beef grilled off more than 240 pounds of beef tenderloin steaks for everyone to sample.  Beef Ambassador Street Teams, sporting “I Heart Beef” T-shirts, directed guests into the booth as the beef checkoff’s mascot, Patty Melt, braved the 90-plus degree heat to make an appearance.
National Beef Ambassadors Ellen Hoffschneider and Jackson Alexander, along with Carol Abrahamzon, National Beef Ambassador program manager, and Northeast Beef Promotion Initiative staff member Lisa Jones, answered consumer questions about beef’s 29 lean cuts, safe grilling tips and today’s beef production practices. Street Team members tweeted about the event and posted snapshots all weekend long under the @BeefFWFNH handle.
Executive Chef Dave Zino of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, a contractor to the Beef Checkoff Program, led a cooking demonstration on the Viking Stage, preparing a simple Teriyaki Steak and Couscous recipe from the Healthy Beef Cookbook. The checkoff also hosted the inaugural “So You Think You Can Grill Cook-off” in the tent on Sunday afternoon to crown the newest amateur grill master of the National Capital Region. Finalist Lincoln Rhoads of Fairfax, Va., pit his grilled flank steak against Jason Yaskoir’s “Fried, Fried, Fried Veal Burger.” Rhoads’ recipe reigned supreme in the contest, winning him the title and a brand new Weber grill.
Pictures and video from the event are available for viewing on Facebook. 

For more information about your beef checkoff investment, visit MyBeefCheckoff.com.


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U.S. Swine Health Improvement Plan | Made by Producers for Producers

Video: U.S. Swine Health Improvement Plan | Made by Producers for Producers

Join Jill Brokaw, a third-generation pig farmer and staff member of the National Pork Board, as she dives into the vital role of the US Swine Health Improvement Plan, also known as US SHIP. The program establishes a national playbook of standards for monitoring African swine fever and classical swine fever.

Why Should Pork Producers Care? If a disease breaks out, officials will establish a control area to help contain the disease. This plan is designed to mitigate risk and demonstrate freedom of disease at the site level. The goal is to support business continuity outside of the control area in case of an outbreak.

How Will the Pork Industry Use US SHIP? US SHIP uses already existing programs to support the standards for biosecurity, traceability and disease surveillance.

Biosecurity: This plan uses your completed Secure Pork Supply plan to demonstrate compliance with the biosecurity program standards and shows your ability to reduce the risk of disease introduction.

Traceability: AgView can be used to demonstrate compliance with the traceability standards and the ability to electronically provide State and Federal agencies the traceability information they need to determine where disease is and isn’t.

Disease Surveillance: The Certified Swine Sampler Collector Program helps expand the number of people certified to take samples. In the event of a large-scale foreign animal disease outbreak, we will need a trained group of sample collectors to help animal health officials find where the disease is present. This is to help you demonstrate freedom of disease and support the permitted movement of animals.

Getting Started with US SHIP:

1. Enroll in U.S. Swine Health Improvement Plan

2. Share 30 days of movement data

3. Have a completed Secure Pork Supply Plan

4. Become U.S. SHIP certified

5. Maintain communication with your state

Takeaway: U.S. Swine Health Improvement Plan helps safeguard animal health. Together, we're creating a sustainable future for pork production in the United States and taking steps to strengthen the business of U.S. pork producers everywhere