You are eating fake food daily
Bob Juchter van Bergen Quast
CEO - Swiss Chamber of Commerce in The Netherlands | corporate lawyer
There are not enough companies focussing on real food. Entrepreneurs are missing a golden opportunity. The reason: there is almost no real food left.
Processed foods and drinks are not a homogeneous group. Differences in type and level of processing become important in terms of health.
Minimally processed foods:?These are items that have seen little processing between the farm and the consumer.
Most minimally processed foods remain recognizable, and may have been washed, peeled, sliced, frozen, dried, or pasteurized. Minimal processing includes removal of inedible portions, as well as refrigeration, freezing, fermenting, pre-cooking, drying, skimming, bottling, and packaging.
Examples include skim milk, some packaged frozen vegetables, grains, legumes, nuts, fruits, flour, fresh meat, roots, and tubers. Packaged pancake mix that includes only minimally processed dry ingredients and requires the consumer to add liquid and eggs, also could be considered a minimally processed food.
Diets wholly or mainly made up from unprocessed and minimally processed foods usually provide adequate nutrient and energy density when they contain little salt; a varied combination of grains, vegetables, fruits, and nuts; and moderate quantities of animal foods.
Moderately processed food:?These foods are moving further away from their original form.
They usually contain many?added ingredients?and may require some preparation before consumption. Examples include a jar of spaghetti sauce, flavored yogurt, and bread. Another example could be a pancake mix that includes all the necessary ingredients, except water. This is different from the minimally processed pancake mix because it contains added ingredient such as monocalcium phosphate, dextrose, and glucose solids.
Other examples include oils, fats, flours, pastas, starches, and sugars.
Highly, ultra processed foods: These foods generally include numerous added ingredients and are mostly or fully prepared in a factory.
Little or no preparation needs to be done before eating ultra-processed foods. Most contain flavor and texture enhancers, salt and other preservatives, flavorants, and coloring agents.
Some ingredients commonly found in highly processed foods include high-fructose corn syrup (sugar extracted from corn), polysorbate (an emulsifier that keeps water and oils mixed), and sodium erythorbate (a food additive helps process meats retain and improve color and flavor). Examples include chips, frozen pizzas, microwave dinners, ice cream, chocolate, candies, sweets, breakfast cereals, cereal bars, and sugared/soft drinks.
Meat products such as nuggets, hot dogs, burgers, and sausages made from processed or extruded remnants of meat also are classified as ultra-processed foods. Ultra-processed foods have no real resemblance to real or minimally processed foods, although they may be shaped, labeled, and marketed to seem wholesome and fresh. They are not!
Most moderate and ultra-processed foods are composed primarily of ingredients rather than whole, real foods. These foods, by themselves, are not palatable and are hardly compatible with survival. This explains the problem with modern diets that contain a lot of ultra-processed food: Most are based on low-nutrient-dense food with little dietary fiber, and have high levels of added sugar, saturated fat, salt, and trans-fatty acids.
Eat whole foods — not ingredients!
Ultra-processed foods induce unhealthy dietary patterns as they usually include”fast” production methods designed to be portable, convenient, and accessible. They encourage eating patterns such as “grazing,” skipping main meals, and eating when doing other things, such as watching television, driving a car or working, and eating alone.
It seems to me, the best dietary advice is to base our food preferences on whole, fresh, and minimally processed foods. To prevent disease and enhance well-being, it is best to avoid (or at least minimize) consumption of processed food as much as possible.
Fake food examples
As detailed above, the following groups constitute most moderate and highly processed foods:
Fake dairy foods you may not realize are fake
Processed cheese (“prepared cheese,” “cheese product,” or “cheese singles”)
Manufacturers of processed cheese containing less than 51 percent actual cheese are not allowed to call the product “natural cheese.” Instead, the industry uses names like “singles” and “cheese products.” Ingredients include small portions of real cheese or other unfermented dairy by-products, plus emulsifiers, saturated vegetable oils, extra salt, food colorings, whey, and/or sugar. That’s right, sugar!
Fake whipped cream
Ingredients include water, hydrogenated vegetable oil (coconut and palm kernel oils), high-fructose corn syrup, skim milk, light cream, less than 2 percent of sodium caseinate, natural and artificial flavors, xanthan and guar gums, polysorbate 60, sorbitan monostearate, and beta-carotene. Sounds delicious, right?
Fake movie-theater popcorn butter
That butter your favorite movie theater uses to flavor your popcorn is not real butter. It’s hydrogenated soybean oil with artificial colors, flavors, and preservatives. The flavoring comes from a chemical called?diacetyl?(DA), which links to lung disease. In addition, DA also has been linked to higher incidences of Alzheimer’s disease.
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Fake ice cream
Ingredients include milk, sugar, corn syrup, cream, whey, mono and diglycerides, carob bean gum, guar gum, carrageenan, natural flavors, annatto (for color), vitamin A palmitate, and Tara gum. Such a product cannot claim the label ice “cream” because it does not contain at least 10 percent milk fat.
Fake condiments you may not realize are fake
Fake mayonnaise
Ingredients include water, soybean oil, vinegar, high-fructose corn syrup, modified cornstarch, sugar, eggs, salt, natural flavor, mustard flour, potassium sorbate as a preservative, paprika, and dried garlic. This white spread doesn’t technically meet the official definition of “mayonnaise,” which requires at least 65 percent vegetable oil. So if you are seeking real mayonnaise, avoid the jar labeled “mayonnaise spread” or “dressing.”
Fake maple syrup
Real maple syrup contains only maple sap. It takes approximately 40 gallons of sap to produce one gallon of syrup. The more common, mass-produced “maple syrup” derives primarily from corn syrup, along with a hefty helping of artificial additives. Anything labeled “maple-flavored syrup,” “pancake syrup,” or “table syrup,” is?fake?maple syrup. In one recent survey, 70 percent of respondents chose the fake version over pure maple syrup! Go figure!
Wasabi or horseradish
More than 90 percent of “wasabi” purchased in Japanese restaurants doesn’t actually contain a?trace?of wasabi. Real wasabi is a root rhizome prized for both its roots and stalks. It costs about $75 per pound, and is highly perishable. Fake wasabi derives from dried horseradish and mustard flour with a hefty dose of green dye.
Fake proteins you may not realize are fake
Fake crabmeat
Ever wonder why store-bought and some restaurant crab cakes and crab dips are so inexpensive? It’s because the “crab” content is virtually nonexistent. Most imitation crabmeat is a seafood product known as?surimi?with various texturizing ingredients, flavorants, and colorants.?Surimi?is mostly composed of fish proteins, usually derived from the cod family. These proteins form a sturdy gel, which resembles actual crab meat once it is dyed orange, shaped and cut into thin strips, and rolled together to mimic authentic crabmeat texture. Sodium, MSG, artificial flavorings, tapioca or corn, added sugar, and poor-quality vegetable oils may join the mix in order to enhance flavor. Ugh. Pass.
Fake bacon bits
They may be a quick and convenient way to add smoky flavor to baked potatoes, casseroles, and other dishes, but a more accurate name would be?no-bacon bits.?They’re actually made from a slew of synthetic ingredients, from caramel coloring to artificial flavorings. Most “flavored” bacon bits include such non-appetizing ingredients as caramel color, red dye, maltodextrin (a partially hydrolyzed starch), lactic acid, and multiple flavor enhancers.
Fake chicken nuggets
In a recent article, two different types of fast food nuggets were analyzed to determine their true content. In both cases, chicken meat was?not?the primary ingredient. In fact, chicken made up just 50 percent or less of the nugget. Other ingredients included chicken fat, blood vessels, nerves, cartilage and bone, and liberal helpings of preservatives and sweeteners.
Fake white tuna
White tuna, or albacore, is prized for its light color and mild flavor. A recent study found that 84 percent of the time, fish marketed as white tuna actually is?escolar,?a cheap species of mackerel that’s banned in Japan and Italy because of its gastrointestinal side effects (prolonged, oily anal leakage when eating six or more ounces).
Fake fruits and sweets you may not realize are fake
Fake blueberries in foods
Foods like imitation blueberries actually exist, thanks to a concoction of dextrose (sugar), palm kernel oil, flour, citric acid, cellulose gum, artificial flavors, and artificial dyes. These fake blueberries are typically found in such packaged foods as pancake mix, corn muffin mixes, and other dry goods that say they’re made “with imitation blueberries” (in fine print, of course).
Fake orange juice
Fruit concentrates are basically syrup, usually added to drinks and foods as additional sweeteners. Ingredients include water, high-fructose corn syrup, and 2 percent or less of each of the following: concentrated juices (orange, tangerine, apple, lime, grapefruit). Additives include citric acid, food flavoring, canola oil, cellulose gum, xanthan gum, sodium hexametaphosphate, sodium benzoate to protect flavor, and different colorants.
Fake chocolate candy
At its most elemental, chocolate is a blend of cocoa beans, cocoa solids, and cocoa butter. But several years ago, products like Milk Duds and Mr. Goodbar swapped cocoa butter, which gives chocolate its creamy texture, for less expensive vegetable oil. Removing cocoa butter violates the FDA’s definition of milk chocolate, so many of the chocolate-coated candies that used to be labeled “milk chocolate” now say “chocolate candy.”
Source: Get real about fake food. Date April 16, 2017 Written By Victor Katch
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