This is something that should receive more press. The original can be found at Yahoo Health.
San
Francisco moved to create warning ads for sugars sodas this week, while
New York City is considering a label on high salt meals. But a slew of
other foods deserve warning labels, too.
Summer is a season full of excitement, adventure—and warning signs. Don’t Feed the Animals. No Lifeguard on Duty. Must Be This Tall to Ride the Tilt-a-Whirl. But one summer attraction that doesn’t come with a warning label—and should—is your picnic basket.
Two municipalities made big moves to change that this week. In San Francisco, supervisors voted in favor of warning ads for sugary sodas—concerned
that those drinks lead to diabetes and obesity—while New York City’s
Health Department will propose that all chains add “a salt-shaker-like symbol” in menus, to indicate when dishes have more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium, which is the recommended daily limit.
These
new rules represent a solid first step toward keeping consumers
informed about what they’re eating, and what the implications of eating
them may be. But there remain a number of substances being added to our
food that probably should carry warning labels, but don’t. The editors
of the new Eat This, Not That! magazine identified some of the
most worrisome foodstuffs in America (many of them are banned in Europe,
Canada and other parts of the globe). Look for these on the label of
your food—and consider yourself warned.
1. ASPARTAME
Found in: More than 6,000 grocery items, including diet sodas, yogurts, and tabletop sweeteners
Brands That Have it: Diet Pepsi and Diet Coke, Uncle Ben’s Sweet and Sour Light, Wrigleys Orbit gum, Equal
What It Is:
A near-zero-calorie artificial sweetener made by combining two amino
acids with methanol, aspartame is most commonly used in diet soda, and
is 180 times sweeter than sugar.
What You Need to Know:
Over the past 30 years, the FDA has received thousands of consumer
complaints due mostly to neurological symptoms such as headaches,
dizziness, memory loss, and, in rare cases, epileptic seizures. Many
studies have shown aspartame to be completely harmless, while others
indicate that the additive might be responsible for a range of cancers.
Until we know for sure, Eat This, Not That! recommends avoiding the
additive. Instead, slim down naturally—and effortlessly—with the magical
power of tea by drinking these 4 Teas That Melt Fat, part of the new no-diet weight-loss e-book, The 7-Day Flat-Belly Tea Cleanse.
2. “ARTIFICIAL FLAVORING”
Found in: Thousands of highly processed foods such as cereals, beverages, and cookies
Brands That Have it: Oreo cookies, Golden Grahams, Gatorade, the list goes on. But some companies are removing them altogether, like Nestlé.
What It Is: This
blanket-term denotes any of hundreds of allowable chemicals such as
butyl alcohol and phenylacetaldehyde dimethyl acetal. The exact
chemicals used in flavoring are the proprietary information of food
processors, used to imitate specific fruits, butter, spices, and so on.
What You Need to Know:
The FDA has approved every item on the list of allowable chemicals, but
because flavorings can hide behind a blanket term, there is no way for
consumers to pinpoint the cause of a reaction they might have had.
3. HIGH-FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP (HFCS)
Found in: Nearly everything: ice cream, chips, cereal, bread, ketchup, canned fruits, yogurt, and two-thirds of all sweetened beverages
Brands That Have it: Wonder Bread Whole Grain Wheat, among thousands more.
What It Is: You
already know about this corn-derived sweetener, and yet maddeningly,
there’s still no warning label, and it hides in “wholesome” foods like
bread, sauces and cereals. HFCS still represents more than 40 percent of
all caloric sweeteners in the supermarket. Despite consumer outrage,
its use is prevalent if slowing—albeit at a snail’s pace—as food
marketers begin to favor pure sugar or other sweeteners.
What You Need to Know:
Since 1980, the US obesity rate has risen proportionately to the
increase in HFCS, and Americans are now consuming at least 200 calories
of the sweetener each day. Research
published by The Endocrine Society found that adults who consumed high
levels of high fructose corn syrup for just two weeks had increased
levels of bad cholesterol, raising their risk of heart disease. (To cut
your risk—and slim down in time for summer!—deploy these essential 14 Ways to Lose Your Belly in 14 Days!)
4. PARTIALLY HYDROGENATED VEGETABLE OIL
Found in: Margarine, pastries, frozen foods, cakes, cookies, crackers, soups, and nondairy creamers
Brand That Has it: Steak ‘N Shake Sausage Gravy and Biscuits (at 8 grams, that’s four days’ worth!)
What It Is:
Food processors like this fat because of its low cost and long shelf
life. It’s a manufactured fat created by forcing hydrogen gas into
vegetable fats under extremely high pressure, an unintended effect of
which is the creation of trans-fatty acids.
What You Need to Know: Trans
fat has been shown to contribute to heart disease more so than
saturated fat. Progressive jurisdictions such as New York City,
California, and Boston have approved legislation to phase trans fat out
of restaurants, and pressure from watchdog groups might eventually lead
to a full ban on the dangerous oil. Yet it’s still out there. A loophole
in the FDA’s labeling requirements allows processors to add as much as
0.49 gram per serving and still claim zero in their nutrition facts.
5. RED #3 (ERYTHROSINE) AND RED #40 (ALLURA RED)
Found in: Fruit cocktail, candy, chocolate cake, cereal, beverages, pastries, maraschino cherries, and fruit snacks
Brands That Have it: Yoplait Light Fat Free Strawberry, for one
What It Is: These include dyes that are cherry red and orange red, respectively. Red #40 is the most widely used food dye in America.
What You Need to Know: The
FDA has proposed a ban on Red #3 in the past, but so far the agency has
been unsuccessful in implementing it. After the dye was inextricably
linked to thyroid tumors in rat studies, the FDA managed to have the
liquid form of the dye removed from external drugs and cosmetics. Put
down that Yoplait and instead buy these all-natural 9 Best Yogurts for Weight Loss.
6. FULLY HYDROGENATED VEGETABLE OIL
Found in: Baked goods, frozen meals, and tub margarine
Brand That Has it: Jif Creamy Peanut Butter
What It Is:
This is an extremely hard, waxlike fat made by forcing as much hydrogen
as possible onto the carbon backbone of fat molecules. To obtain a
manageable consistency, food manufacturers often blend the hard fat with
unhydrogenated liquid fats.
What You Need to Know:
In theory, fully hydrogenated oils, as opposed to partially
hydrogenated oils, should contain zero trans fat. But the process of
hydrogenation isn’t completely perfect, which means that trans fat will
inevitably occur in small amounts.
7. MONO- AND DIGLYCERIDES
Found in: Peanut butter, ice cream, margarine, baked goods, and whipped topping
Brands that Have it: Dove Unconditional Chocolate Ice Cream, Ben & Jerry’s Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough
What It Is:
These occur naturally in foods and constitute about 1 percent of normal
fats. They’re added to foods to bind liquids with fats.
What You Need to Know:
Aside from being a source of fat, the glycerides themselves pose no
serious health threats. But the fat is reason enough to want a label.
And speaking of dangerous fat hiding right before your eyes, click here
to discover the shocking truth about How Tilapia Is Worse Than Bacon!
8. BHA AND BHT (BUTYLATED HYDROXYANISOLE AND BUTYLATED HYDROXYTOLUENE)
Found in: Beer, crackers, cereals, butter, and foods with added fats
Brand That Has it: Trix cereal, which also has Red #40 and artificial flavors
What It Is: Petroleum-derived antioxidants used to preserve fats and oils, these are often added to “preserve freshness.”
What You Need to Know: Of
the two, BHA is considered the more dangerous. Studies have shown it to
cause cancer in the forestomachs of rats, mice, and hamsters. The
Department of Health and Human Services classifies the preservative as
“reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.” Warning label? Yes
please.
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