Food Labelling (Again): After posting... - British Heart Fou...

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Food Labelling (Again)

MichaelJH profile image
MichaelJHHeart Star
15 Replies

After posting about few labelling a few weeks ago I was surprised to turn on the radio just now to hear an item about supermarkets being misleading and unhelpful about healthy foods. I am not surprised because it should be obvious to everyone that the bottom line for supermarkets and fast food outlets is profit - nothing more, nothing less. The link is here:- bbc.com/news/health-47311097

Within a five mile radius there were two cafes promoting healthier food. One that suggests that gluten free, dairy free, egg free, etc. is a healthy choice does OK as it had attracted a core clientele. Please for those with allergies do not take this the wrong way - I respect choice being available not promoting it as a healthy lifestyle. The other opened last year and has already gone under although I think mismanagement and pricing were additional factors.

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MichaelJH profile image
MichaelJH
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15 Replies
Rob6868 profile image
Rob6868

??????

MichaelJH profile image
MichaelJHHeart Star in reply toRob6868

The signal dropped :( - now completed. :)

MichaelJH profile image
MichaelJHHeart Star

Added link to original post:- bbc.com/news/health-47311097

Internet driving me up the wall today! :(

jimmyq profile image
jimmyq

Supermarkets tend to have free-from aisles nowadays. I think this is just a jump onto the, largely discredited, gluten-free bandwagon to enable them to charge higher prices. My wife is allergic to diary products but there are very few dairy-free products in these aisles.

MichaelJH profile image
MichaelJHHeart Star in reply tojimmyq

My niece is also allergic to dairy. It appears A2 milk may be suitable for people allergic/intolerant to dairy. Problem is whilst it has featured in the media you cannot source it locally.

jimmyq profile image
jimmyq in reply toMichaelJH

We use soya milk. It is OK.

Pippa1234 profile image
Pippa1234

Do your own research, its easy. Dont fall for the claptrap.

Rob6868 profile image
Rob6868

oat milk now all the way.

In my porridge and tea..Or hazelnut

Chappychap profile image
Chappychap

Over the past year the share price of Heinz has fallen nearly 30%. There are lots of reasons but a key one could be that people are, at long last, finally turning away from processed foods. A 30ml portion of Heinz Tomato Ketchup contains the equivalent of two sugar cubes. Once you know facts like that that it becomes a lot less likely that you'll let your kids splurge it all over their food!

Griff-64 profile image
Griff-64 in reply toChappychap

I used to work in a dispensary for a food manufacturer, dispensing minor ingredients for processing. Tomato ketchup was one of the products I was involved in. Not the well known brand, but used in sachets for fast food outlets.

The ingredients were horrendous!

I only issued 3, ketchup spice, acetic acid and salt.

The finished batch was one tonne and included 600 grams of spice, 10.2 kg of acetic acid at 80% concentration, and 18.5 kg of salt. The major ingredients made up the bulk.

I only issued the acetic acid once myself and refused to go anywhere near it after that. At 100% concentration, breathing it in could at best, cause health problems, at worst, it would kill.

I never use ketchup, knowing how unhealthy it is.

MichaelJH profile image
MichaelJHHeart Star in reply toChappychap

Some years ago I stayed in a hotel that had gourmet restaurant. At breakfast I saw the tomato sauce was an Italian organic variety so decided on a taster. Very, very different to Heinz and supermarket variants. It was far less sweet with a tangy quite refreshing flavour. You could by bottles for £4.50 so definitely an upmarket product.

Griff-64 profile image
Griff-64

I worked in the food industry for a number of years,

One of the companies being H.... Who made desserts for most of the supermarket chains.

It was a real eye opener tbh. But in an informative way.

You get what you pay for, the cheaper brands were made with cheaper ingredients, and perhaps not natural products, like flavour enhancers when only a very small amount of the main ingredient was used (eg apple or a butter flavour.)

The top end of the price range was real ingredients, good quality and no chemicals.

The second company I worked for, I was issuing minor ingredients for processing. They didn't even keep allergens separate from other products when I started.

Anyone could go help themselves to anything when I wasn't there.

Handel profile image
Handel

Thanks for the link Michael. I've taken to staring at labels now and have signed up to Food Standards updates.

You'd be amazed how many products have wrong allergen labelling (and how many products are recalled for metal and plastic bits)!!

food.gov.uk/news-alerts

xx

Griff-64 profile image
Griff-64 in reply toHandel

A lot of food manufacturers have a metal detector on the end of the production line but not everything is picked up, depends on the size.

One place I worked had a chart on the wall for employees to check and see how many foreign object complaints they'd had each month.

Hair was the biggest culprit, followed by plastic and stones. All plastic hand tools used in production were stainless steel and/or blue plastic, blue shows up better apparently. If we had any other colour plastic complaint, it usually got blamed on the supplier of fruit or one of the other ingredients, that kept our complaints list lower. All the complaints were taken very seriously and fully investigated, but humans were involved in the processing, so it will never be eliminated ☺

Handel profile image
Handel in reply toGriff-64

Interesting stuff Griff.

I guess that's why the catering industry has blue plasters. Just waiting for the day we have bright blue foodstuff - can't be too long before that happens!!!

All the very best xxx

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