logo
In China, 'The Great American' burger is now made with Australian beef

In China, 'The Great American' burger is now made with Australian beef

CNBC2 days ago

At his restaurant in Beijing, Geng Xiaoyun used to offer a special dish of salt-baked chicken feet — or "phoenix talons" as they are called in China — imported from America.
With prices climbing 30% from March due to tariffs, the owner of Kunyuan restaurant had to pull the Chinese delicacy from the menu.
"American chicken feet are so beautiful," Xiaoyun said. "They're spongy so they taste great. Chinese [chicken] feet just aren't as good."
Geng can now source chicken feet from Brazil or Russia but said they just don't stand up to the American ones. He keeps a small stash for himself but hopes to serve his American phoenix talons once again.
"The price of American chicken feet will come back down," Xiaoyun said, "as long as there are no big changes in the world's political situation."
But the 90-day tariff pause agreed by China and the U.S. in Geneva in May is now under threat as both sides have accused each other of breaching the terms.
On Monday, the Chinese Commerce Ministry responded to President Donald Trump's claim that the country "totally violated its agreement." The ministry pointed at recent U.S. artificial intelligence chip export controls as actions that "severely undermine" the Geneva pact.
As the world waits and watches, American agricultural products have been vanishing from Chinese stores and restaurants and losing ground to other imports.
U.S. Department of Agriculture grade beef has been a draw for years at Home Plate, a Beijing restaurant known locally for its American-style barbecue. However, staff said the restaurant stopped serving American beef last month.
Dishes like "The Great American" burger are made with beef imported from Australia.
Australian beef has zero duty under the terms of the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement, though China does maintain the right to a safeguard limit on those imports.
Liu Li, a beef supplier at the Sanyuanli market for three decades, said the tariffs have disrupted supply, hiking the price of U.S. beef by 50% compared to before the tariff fight.
"U.S. beef is fattier and tastier," Li said. "It's a shame we're in a trade war. The high price is just too much to bear."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dollar Tree Stock Falls After Retailer Warns of Tariff Pressure
Dollar Tree Stock Falls After Retailer Warns of Tariff Pressure

Wall Street Journal

time25 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Dollar Tree Stock Falls After Retailer Warns of Tariff Pressure

Dollar Tree warned that tariffs will create near-term pressure, but remains optimistic about long-term prospects. The stock dropped as much as 10% Wednesday morning. The discount-retail chain ran up about $70 million of extra costs while the U.S. had 145% levies on Chinese goods, said Chief Financial Officer Stewart Glendinning. He said profit this quarter would be "meaningfully lower than last year in light of higher tariffs and other costs." Dollar Tree is partly managing rising costs by negotiating with suppliers and buying products from different countries. With these actions, the company offset about 90% of the first round of tariffs, said Mike Creedon, the company's chief executive. It is working through addressing the latest round.

Ex-WH press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre claims she's no longer a Democrat in teasing memoir of ‘broken' Biden admin
Ex-WH press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre claims she's no longer a Democrat in teasing memoir of ‘broken' Biden admin

New York Post

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Ex-WH press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre claims she's no longer a Democrat in teasing memoir of ‘broken' Biden admin

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden's longtime White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre announced Wednesday that she has left the Democratic Party and is writing a tell-all book about the 'broken' administration she served. Jean-Pierre, 50, worked as Biden's top spokeswoman for two years and eight months and stunned fellow White House alums by announcing the looming release of 'Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside the Party Lines' due out on Oct. 21. 3 Karine Jean-Pierre repeatedly denied Joe Biden was cognitively impaired while she was the White House spokeswoman. Getty Images 'Jean-Pierre didn't come to her decision to be an Independent lightly,' Hachette Book Group says in a promotional release, which hints that she may focus her ire on figures aside from Biden in the account. 'She has served two American presidents, Obama and Biden… She takes us through the three weeks that led to Biden's abandoning his bid for a second term and the betrayal by the Democratic Party that led to his decision,' the tease goes. 3 Jean-Pierre is attempting to sell her book— in which she urges Americans to be independents. AP 'In a hard-hitting yet hopeful critique, Jean-Pierre defines what it means to be part of the growing percentage of our fractured electorate that is Independent, why it can be worthwhile to carve a political space more loyal to personal beliefs than a party affiliation, and what questions you need to ask yourself to determine where you fit politically.' 3 KJP stunned Democrats by announcing she left the party. AP Biden stood by Jean-Pierre amid criticism by detractors and rivals inside the administration who viewed her as ineloquent and often unprepared. 'I think we need to stop thinking in boxes and think outside of our boxes, and not be so partisan,' Jean-Pierre said in an Instagram post Wednesday, '… this book 'Independent', it's about looking outside of boxes, not just always being in a partisan stance.'

Australian woman on trial for mushroom murder of in-laws claims she was trying to fix a ‘bland' lunch
Australian woman on trial for mushroom murder of in-laws claims she was trying to fix a ‘bland' lunch

New York Post

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Australian woman on trial for mushroom murder of in-laws claims she was trying to fix a ‘bland' lunch

Before Erin Patterson's in-laws and their relatives arrived at her home for lunch, she bought pricey ingredients, consulted friends about recipes and sent her children out to a movie. Then, the Australian woman served them a dish containing poisonous death cap mushrooms — a meal that was fatal for three of her four guests. Whether that was Patterson's plan is at the heart of a triple murder trial that has gripped Australia for nearly six weeks. Advertisement 7 Erin Patterson woman served her in-laws and their relatives a dish containing poisonous death cap mushrooms. AP Prosecutors in the Supreme Court case in the state of Victoria say the accused lured her guests to lunch with a lie about having cancer, before deliberately feeding them toxic fungi. But her lawyers say the tainted beef Wellington she served was a tragic accident caused by a mushroom storage mishap. She denies murdering her estranged husband's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and their relative, Heather Wilkinson. Advertisement The mother of two also denies attempting to murder Heather's husband Ian Wilkinson, who survived the meal. In a rare step for a defendant charged with murder, Patterson chose to speak in her own defense at her trial this week. 7 Erin Pattterson's lawyers say the tainted beef Wellington she served was a tragic accident caused by a mushroom storage mishap. 10 News First On Wednesday, she spoke publicly for the first time about the fateful lunch in July 2023 and offered her explanations on how she planned the meal and didn't become sick herself. Adding more mushrooms to a 'bland' meal 7 In a rare step for a defendant charged with murder, Patterson chose to speak in her own defense at her trial this week. via REUTERS Advertisement No one disputes that Patterson, 50, served death cap mushrooms to her guests for lunch in the rural town of Leongatha, but she says she did it unknowingly. Patterson said Wednesday she splurged on expensive ingredients and researched ideas to find 'something special' to serve. She deviated from her chosen recipe to improve the 'bland' flavor, she said. She believed she was adding dried fungi bought from an Asian supermarket from a container in her pantry, she told the court. 'Now I think that there was a possibility that there were foraged ones in there as well,' she told her lawyer, Colin Mandy. Patterson had foraged wild mushrooms for years, she told the court Tuesday, and had put some in her pantry weeks before the deaths. The accused says she 'shouldn't have lied' about cancer Advertisement 7 She believed she was adding dried fungi bought from an Asian supermarket from a container in her pantry, she told the court. AP Patterson, who formally separated from her husband Simon Patterson in 2015, said she felt 'hurt' when Simon told her the night before the lunch that he 'wasn't comfortable' attending. She earlier told his relatives that she'd arranged the meal to discuss her health. Patterson admitted this week that she never had cancer — but after a health scare, she told her in-laws she did. In reality, Patterson said she intended to have weight loss surgery. But she was too embarrassed to tell anybody and planned to pretend to her in-laws that she was undergoing cancer treatment instead, she said. 7 She earlier told his relatives that she'd arranged the meal to discuss her health. Provided 'I was ashamed of the fact that I didn't have control over my body or what I ate,' a tearful Patterson said Wednesday. 'I didn't want to tell anybody, but I shouldn't have lied to them.' Patterson says she threw up her mushroom meal The accused said she believes she was spared the worst effects of the poisoned meal because she self-induced vomiting shortly after her lunch guests left. She had binged on most of a cake and then made herself throw up — a problem she said she had struggled with for decades. Patterson also said she believes she had eaten enough of the meal to cause her subsequent diarrhea. She then sought hospital treatment but unlike her lunch guests, she quickly recovered. Advertisement At the hospital where her guests' health was deteriorating, her estranged husband asked her about the dehydrator she used to dry her foraged mushrooms, she said. 7 Erin Patterson said she believes she was spared the worst effects of the poisoned meal because she self-induced vomiting shortly after her lunch guests left. Newspix via Getty Images 'Is that how you poisoned my parents?' she said Simon Patterson asked her. Growing afraid she would be blamed for the poisoning and that her children would be taken from her, Patterson said she later disposed of her dehydrator. She told investigators she'd never owned one and hadn't foraged for mushrooms before. Advertisement While still at the hospital, she insisted she'd bought all the mushrooms at stores even though she said she knew it was possible that foraged mushrooms had accidentally found their way into the meal. She was too frightened to tell anyone, Patterson said. 7 If convicted, Erin Pattterson faces life in prison for murder and 25 years for attempted murder. JAMES ROSS/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock Also later, Patterson said she remotely wiped her cell phone while it sat in an evidence locker to remove pictures of mushrooms she'd foraged. Advertisement Prosecutors argued in opening their case in April that she poisoned her husband's family on purpose, although they didn't suggest a motive. She carefully avoided poisoning herself and faked being ill, they said. The trial continues on Thursday with Patterson's cross-examination by the prosecutors. If convicted, she faces life in prison for murder and 25 years for attempted murder.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store