Tuesday, June 30, 2009

The Go Plate – Food & Beverage Holder

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The Go Plate - Food and beverage Holder

There are many clever people in the world and then every once in a while you stumble upon a real genius. With probably one of the best inventions of the 21st century, the Go Plate inventor should definitely receive a Nobel prize or something like that…yes I am a man…

The Go Plate is a reusable Food  and Beverage Holder perfect for parties and buffet-style events, the plate stays put while you eat. When you want to take a drink, simply lift the plate off! Designed for warm or cold foods, they’re crafted from sturdy, reusable, recycled clear plastic that can go right into the dishwasher.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Jamba Juice

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Fast Food Restaurant Reviews And Ratings For Jamba Juice

Name: Jamba Juice

Type of Food: Wraps, sandwiches, smoothies

Interesting Fact: Jamba Juice was  named the #1 Healthy option in the Quick Refreshment category in Zagat’s 2009 Fast Food Survey.

History: Jamba Juice was founded in April 1990 by Cal Poly graduate Kirk Perron, along with cofounders Joe Vergara, Kevin Peters, and Linda Ozawa Olds. In August 1997, Jamba entered into an operating agreement with Whole Foods Market to sell only “natural” products inside some of the Whole Foods’s locations, including Jamba’s smoothies’ ingredients. Jamba Juice focuses on healthy lifestyle food and beverage offerings, these include fruit smoothies, juices, teas, hot oatmeal made with organic, steel cut oats, and baked goods. Jamba Juice has 732 locations consisting of 499 company- owned and operated stores and 233 franchise stores.

Website: www.jambajuice.com

View the menu: here

Find your local Jamba Juice: here

Specials: -NewsletterGift Card – Coupons

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Weighty issue of TV diets

As obesity problems in children grow, there are calls for a ban on advertising unhealthy food to children, writes MICHAEL KELLY .

THE IRISH Heart Foundation and the National Heart Alliance (NHA) have called on parents to become watchdogs to protect their children against the marketing of unhealthy foods through TV adverts, social networking sites and cartoons.

The organisations will present to a Joint Oireachtas Committee on Communications, Energy and Natural Resources tomorrow to press the case for a ban on the advertising of unhealthy foods to children.

The two organisations have established the Children’s Food Campaign and are encouraging parents to share their experiences of the impact of such marketing on a website, www.childrensfoodcampaign.net.

Childhood obesity is considered a time-bomb issue for Ireland’s public health system – one in five Irish children aged five to 17 years old is overweight or obese.

The estimated current cost of childhood obesity to the health service is €339 million per annum.

Across the European Union more than five million school-age children are estimated to be obese and each year nearly half a million more join that number.

According to the International Association for the Study of Obesity, nearly one million of these children already show signs of high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels and early signs of heart disease.

As they become adults, they are more susceptible to conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, certain types of cancer as well as a range of mental health problems.

The World Health Organisation concluded in 2006 that there was strong scientific evidence to link the commercial promotion of foods and beverages to poor diets and obesity in children.

“The vast majority of food ads aimed at children are for products which are high in fat, salt and sugar – the classic junk foods like fizzy drinks, confectionary, sugary cereals, salty snacks and fast food,” says Janis Morrissey, dietitian with the Irish Heart Foundation.

“The Children’s Food Campaign was set up in response to parental concern about lack of legislation over food ads to children, but also to raise awareness among those parents who may not be aware of the marketing subtleties employed to attract children towards unhealthy foods.”

According to the European Consumer’s Organisation, a key problem is that young children have difficulty understanding that advertising is a tool to sell products.

“Research has shown that children under eight can not understand the difference,” says Morrissey. “The advertisers use music, bright colours and characters to make it feel like a programme so that a child won’t know it’s an advert. It’s very sophisticated. That is why they need protection.”

The regulations that currently govern advertising to children in Ireland are in section 7 of the Broadcasting Commission of Ireland’s Children’s Advertising Code. The focus is on encouraging responsible broadcasting – in other words, a voluntary code of practice for the food and advertising industries.

Over the past five years numerous organisations including the Irish Heart Foundation, the Consumers Association of Ireland and the Children’s Rights Alliance have highlighted that the code is insufficient to protect the health of children.

They have also called for a complete ban on the advertising of unhealthy foods to children before the 9pm watershed, a move they say would be a huge boost in the fight against childhood obesity.

Such a ban would bring Ireland into line with many other European countries including the UK where the government has banned advertising of high fat and high sugar foods during TV programmes aimed at children up to 16 years.

Sweden and the Netherlands have both implemented extensive bans on advertising to children under 12.

According to a 2008 opinion poll carried out by Red C on behalf of the National Heart Alliance, there is overwhelming public support for such a move here. Four out of five parents support a ban, while nine out of 10 parents agree that advertising influences their children’s food choices.

The Broadcasting Bill 2008, which is currently progressing through the Oireachtas, gives Minister Eamon Ryan the option to prohibit the advertising of foods and beverages, particularly those which contain fat, trans-fatty acids, salts or sugars.

Action can not be taken however until the bill is enacted. “We have seen from the UK case that it can work,” says Morrissey. “We will urge the committee to ensure that once the new Broadcasting Authority of Ireland is established, it will prioritise the introduction of a ban.”

The Children’s Rights Alliance has called for the ban to take a broad definition of what constitutes children’s programming, arguing that it is not simply a programme made for children, but also other programmes that children watch such as soap operas and sports programmes.

According to the Irish Heart Foundation, the food industry is now using websites and text campaigns to increase brand loyalty among very young children.

The organisation believes the Government needs to target not only TV advertising but also advertising online and in cinemas, as well as school sponsorship.

Morrissey casts this issue as a battle between David and Goliath. “The food industry has a massive budget at its disposal to promote its products to kids. No health awareness campaign from any organisation can possibly counter that. This is why we need a legislative approach.

“There is a lot of focus at present on children’s rights – well, a ban on food advertising would be an example of how we can legislate to protect our children.”

Monday, June 22, 2009

Soda Taxes Can Help Fund Health Coverage and Prevention Programs, Say Experts ~ Newsroom ~ News from CSPI

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WASHINGTON—Federal and state governments should levy excise taxes on soda and other sugary drinks both to raise revenues to pay for health coverage and prevention programs, and also to decrease consumption of products that promote obesity, the Center for Science in the Public Interest said today. The nutrition and food safety watchdog group launched a web-based Liquid Candy Tax Calculator to show policymakers, activists and media exactly how much money states and the federal government could raise in this way.
For instance, a new federal excise tax of one penny per 12-ounce soda could generate more than $1.5 billion dollars per year, according to the calculator. A steeper tax of one penny per ounce could raise roughly $16 billion a year—an amount that would make a serious down payment on a comprehensive health care reform bill. CSPI estimates that taxing soda at that amount would also reduce consumption by 13 percent overall and perhaps more among children, which would help slow the obesity and diabetes epidemics. The state of Massachusetts, which is weighing a sales tax of 8 percent on sugary drinks, could raise $105 million.
"Soda and non-carbonated soft drinks are basically liquid candy, providing nothing of positive benefit to the diet, just empty calories," said CSPI executive director Michael F. Jacobson. "It’s cheaper than dirt, we consume too much of it, and it causes expensive health problems. The question is why has it gone untaxed for so long at the federal level?" Also today, leading health care and nutrition advocates are urging Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) to tax soft drinks to help fund health reform.
"While many factors contribute to weight gain, soft drinks are the only food or beverage shown to have a direct link to obesity, which in turn can lead to hypertension, strokes, heart attacks, diabetes, cancer, and arthritis, and other health and psychosocial problems," the advocates wrote in a letter to Baucus. "In addition, consumption of sugary beverages can cause tooth decay and dental erosion."
Besides CSPI, groups signing on to the letter include the American Public Health Association, the California Center for Public Health Advocacy, Consumers Union, Partnership for Prevention, Shape Up America!, and Trust for America’s Health. Individuals signing include Kelly Brownell of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University and Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health.
Separately, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has previously endorsed a tax on soft drinks to help pay for health-care reform.
In April, Brownell and former New York City Health Director Dr. Tom Frieden published a much-discussed paper in the New England Journal of Medicine making the case for a tax on sugared beverages. (Frieden is now director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.) The forward to the paper quoted Adam Smith, the father of free-market economics, thusly: "Sugar, rum, and tobacco are commodities which are nowhere necessaries of life, which are become objects of almost universal consumption, and which are therefore extremely proper subjects of taxation."
CSPI's calculator also displays the rates of overweight and obesity in the United States. and in each state, as well as the costs of medical care due to adult obesity. Of the $95 billion cost to treat obesity-related disease nationwide, about half is borne by Medicare and Medicaid.
Though a federal tax on soda would be new, more than a dozen states already have taxes on soda and other snack foods, including Arkansas, California, New York, and West Virginia.
In May, CSPI's Jacobson testified before the Senate Finance Committee urging a new federal tax on sugary drinks, as well as long-overdue increases in federal excise taxes on alcohol, to help pay for health coverage for all Americans. When the committee released a list of possible funding mechanisms for health care reform, it did include raising alcohol taxes and a new tax on sugary drinks.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

A 'juicy' summer challenge

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Contributed
Kevin Williams, food technologist with the Jamaica Business Development Corporation, says cool juices are now a hot area for investment.

Dieting for weight loss and the general pursuit of physical fitness has created a market niche - health foods - that continues to perform reasonably well, allowing entrepreneurs in this field to thumb their noses at the recession.

Having picked up this tidbit, SmallBiz: Problem Centre, opted to be proactive this week. No one wrote in with any particular problem, nevertheless, we chose to lay out what is required for an entrepreneur willing to take on this market.

Indeed, a Sunday Business informal telephone poll among sellers of natural juices found that they were reporting good profits and were upbeat about growth potential. (Two in the market are featured on Page C5).

Thirst-quenching

Why? Summer is here and everyone gets thirsty under the blazing Jamaican sun.

Natural juices are a best-seller in many vegetarian restaurants and food outlets, says Kevin Williams, food technologist at the Jamaica Business Development Corporation.

The beverages are in demand throughout the year, although the peak buying season is during the hot summer months.

A natural juice has no chemicals or preservatives added to it. Some manufacturers may add brown sugar or honey to sweeten it, and a little ginger, nutmeg and lime for flavouring.

Natural juices taste best when they are freshly made, ideally right before serving, but always on the same day.

Health trends

Williams says that both local and international markets are turning away from artificially flavoured fruit drinks in favour of natural fruits.

This shift in consumer preference can be attributed to an increasingly health-conscious society. People are paying more attention to the ingredients in the foods that they eat.

Williams says as well that in recent years, the term 'super fruits' is increasingly in use in the beverage industry.

It refers to fruits that are exceptionally rich in nutrients and high in antioxidant quality while, at the same time, have an appealing taste. Examples of such fruits are noni, pomegranate, mango, acai from South America, and cranberry, which is grown in North America.

Natural juices made from organically grown fruits and vegetables are also quite popular among health enthusiasts.

Clients for natural juices include:

Health-food stores and supermarkets: They will buy in small quantities, but will buy a full range of juices.

Restaurants and fast-food outlets: They will buy juices in bulk each day. Orange juice and fruit punch are quite popular with this market.

Individuals: Persons who drink natural juices for the health benefits and the refreshing taste of the juices.

The costs attached to a natural juice business include:

Packaging and labelling: This can be quite expensive, especially if you require unique bottles/packaging.

Raw material, that is, fruits and vegetables: Costs can be very high and can vary significantly depending on the time of the year.

Machinery and equipment: This will vary depending on the scale of operation.

Storage: Refrigeration is generally needed for storage of raw materials and finished products, both of which are highly perishable.

For all customers, quality is the most important requirement. Top-quality natural juices are pleasing to the palate. They have the same flavour across batches, are attractively packaged, have a good appearance, no floating matter - foreign particles or sediments allowed - and should have the natural colour of the fruit.

You may package your product in one of three ways:

1. Sterilised 12-ounce plastic bottles, for sale directly to clients or packaged in cases. Supermarkets and health-food stores will want their juice supplied in these small bottles. Label bottles with the type of juice and the ingredients. As your business grows, consider professionally printed labels.

2. Sterilised one-gallon plastic bottles, from which you can sell juice in plastic cups, preferably those with covers. Provide straws.

3. If you supply fast-food outlets and restaurants, they will want their juice supplied in five-gallon buckets.

Story of Kraft Foods
Kraft Foods is the second largest food and beverage company in the world.
Chicago businessman name James L. Kraft started the company in 1903 by pioneering innovations in the wholesale distribution of cheese.
His four brothers joined him in 1909, and they incorporated the fledging business as J. L. Kraft & Bros.
Kraft used innovative and aggressive advertising techniques to promote his line of 31 varieties of cheese, becoming of the first food companies to use color advertisements in national magazines.
The company opened its first cheese factory in 1914.
Until Kraft entered the business, cheese was produced in large wheels and had a tendency to spoil quickly when cut because most grocers and consumers had no access to refrigeration.
Thus problem inspired Kraft in 1915 to produce a blended, pasteurized cheese that he marketed in metal containers as “process cheese.”
The sale of six million pounds of cheese to the US Army during World War 1 insured the fortunes of the company.
The company changed its name to Kraft Cheese Company in the 1900s soon after merging with the Phenix Cheese Corporation, the maker of Philadelphia Brand Cream Cheese (introduced in the United States in 1872).
In 1928 the company introduced Velveeta pasteurized processed cheese spread and Miracle Whip salad processing, adding Kraft caramels in 1933.
Kraft now famous macaroni and cheese dinner was introduced in 1937 and Parkay margarine entered the limelight in 1940.
Once again, the company benefited when it became a major food supplier to the Army during World War 11.
Cheez Whiz was launched in 1952, individually wrapped cheese slices in 1965, and Light n’ Lively yoghurt in 1969.
Because of a shrinking tobacco market, the Phillip Morris purchased General Foods in 1995. Kraft was added to its corporate holdings in 1988 followed by the purchase of Nabisco in 2000.
Story of Kraft Foods

Saturday, June 20, 2009

SPLENDA foods & Beverages

7 in 10 Households Choose Foods & Beverages with the ’Sweetened with SPLENDA® Brand’ Logo

Recipe Videos

 WEBWIRE – Friday, June 19, 2009

Decatur, Ill. – Research confirms it. SPLENDA® Brand Sweetener has become a household name widely used in food and beverage products.

Tate & Lyle reveals in a recent consumer study that more than 70 percent of U.S. households purchase foods and beverages displaying the familiar ‘Sweetened with SPLENDA® Brand’ logo on the package.

The study, conducted by Information Resources, Inc., confirms that a majority of U.S. households, an estimated 82 million, purchase products with the ‘Sweetened with SPLENDA® Brand’ logo annually. These purchases occur across an extensive array of categories where consumers expect great sweet taste without added calories, such as yogurt, juices and soft drinks, cookies, ice cream, baking mixes and even pickles. More than 1,600 individual products carry the SPLENDA® logo in the U.S.

“The most important thing the study reveals is that SPLENDA® Sucralose is a broadly accepted lifestyle ingredient across a wide cross-section of American households,” says Dave Tuchler, Vice President of Marketing for SPLENDA® Sucralose, Tate & Lyle. “When shoppers repeatedly purchase products with the ‘Sweetened with SPLENDA® Brand’ logo, it’s their vote of confidence that the ingredient helps deliver great taste, as well as health and wellness benefits in their favorite products.”

Tuchler adds, “Consumers are increasingly looking for great-tasting products that help them meet their and their families’ healthy lifestyle needs. Seeing the ‘Sweetened with SPLENDA® Brand’ logo helps make the purchase easier.”

About SPLENDA® Sucralose

Tate & Lyle’s SPLENDA® Sucralose starts with sugar, tastes like sugar, but it’s not sugar. SPLENDA® Sucralose comprehensively outperforms all the high-intensity sweeteners on the market through its unique combination of taste, versatility and stability – making it the best choice to help manufacturers seize the market opportunity for tastier, healthier, lower-calorie foods and beverages. For more information about SPLENDA® Sucralose, visit www.sucralose.com

About Tate & Lyle

Tate & Lyle is a world-leading renewable food and industrial ingredients company, serving a global market from more than 45 production facilities throughout the Americas, Europe and South East Asia. Our efficient, large-scale manufacturing plants turn agricultural products, corn and cane sugar, into valuable ingredients for our customers. These ingredients add taste, texture, nutrition and increased functionality to products that millions of people around the world use or consume every day.

Tate & Lyle’s range of leading branded food ingredients includes SPLENDA® Sucralose, PROMITOR™ Dietary Fiber, STA-LITE® Polydextrose, Tate & Lyle Fairtrade Sugar and Lyle’s Golden Syrup. Tate & Lyle also produces branded industrial ingredients including Bio-PDO™, Ethylex® and STA-Lock® paper starches; and staple ingredients such as high fructose corn syrup, sugar, ethanol, citric acid and basic starches. In addition to providing a wide range of ingredients our expert sales and product applications teams support customers by providing technical advice and proprietary consumer insight studies.

Tate & Lyle is listed on the London Stock Exchange under the symbol TATE.L. American Depositary Receipts trade under TATYY. In the year to 31 March 2009, Tate & Lyle employed 5,718 people in its subsidiaries and joint ventures, and sales totalled $6.4 billion (£3.55 billion) ttp://www.tateandlyle.com

German Recipes


Do You Enjoy Eating German Food?

How About Cooking Delicious

Authentic German Recipes?

Then you have come to the right place!!!

Dear Friend,

For years I have watched my German mother cook the most outstanding traditional German recipes. She learned her recipes from my grandmother who trained at a high class finishing school for girls and later cooked for high society people as well as her large family.

german meatballs

The art of cooking authentic German recipes seems to have long been forgotten. Even our friends and relatives in Germany have cir come to buying ready made German food rather than doing it themselves. But the old ways always taste the best.

My mother is now on the other side of 70 (though you wouldn’t think so when you see her). For years I had tried to coax her recipes out of her, but like most brilliant cooks, the recipes are mostly in her head. When I’d ask her how she made such and such, the usual answer was “oh, a little bit of this, and a little bit of that …”, I’m sure you know how it goes. Anyway the result was that the recipe continued to remain a secret.

So how was I going to get these scrumptious recipes out of my mothers head and not be lost for ever. How could I learn to cook like her, and even pass the German recipes on to my children, family and friends.

Then I came up with an idea. What if I were to video her in her kitchen as she cooked? I had to plead really hard with her, and after a lot of persuasion she finally agreed!!!

Then as we began to make these videos I thought how great it would be to share these wonderful recipes with others, so that they could enjoy them too. And so it is my pleasure to pass on to you all the little known secrets that would otherwise be lost to history.

Below are a couple of these recipes, straight from her plain and simple little kitchen. But I can assure you that what comes out of it is good old authentic and traditional German cooking, that will have your mouth watering, and your friends begging you to tell them how you put this together.

So please enjoy the videos, and I will even send you a printed version of the recipe. Just fill out the box below the videos and I will gladly send them to you.

Happy German Cooking

Roger Salisbury

The two recipes below are a favorite in Germany and go well together.

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German Schnitzel

German schnitzel is easy to make, but so tasty. Everyone will love you for serving this!!!


German Potato Salad

Potato salad is another traditional German recipe, and this one in particular will really get your mouth watering. Enjoy!!!

Plastic Containers Safe to Use?

Question: Have plastic food and beverage containers been proven safe?

Answer: No.

During the film's graduation party in THE GRADUATE, Mr. McGuire pulls Benjamin Braddock (Dustin Hoffman) aside to offer sage advice for his future. His future would be one word: "plastics."

Of course, we all know Mr. McGuire's advice and prognostication was correct. Plastics can only be made by man in his infinite wisdom, hence they are patentable. The profit in the manufacture of plastics has been huge. Plastics are everywhere. Plastic manufacturing now uses 4% of the world's oil production annually. Automobiles are now 9% plastic. It is of my special concern that more foods and beverages are being put into plastic containers. Plastics are ubiquitous now. They persist and accumulate in our society as their production exceeds their chemical degradation rate. Harmful chemicals from plastics are now commonly found in groundwater, waterways, and drinking water.

While standing out in the summer heat in Phoenix, Arizona in 1981, my girlfriend asked me what was causing the film to form on the inside of the windshield of her new Mazda 626. She said that she had to wipe it off every morning so she could see to drive to work. I didn't know then. I do now! It was phthalates, the chemical that was added to the plastic dash cover to soften it and prevent cracking. I'm sure by now most of the phthalate has evaporated into our atmosphere and the Mazda is in some junkyard with a cracked up dash.

Phthalates are EDC's (Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals.) They are chemicals found in recycle codes #1 through #6 plastics. Another EDC (Bisphenol A) is in recycle code #7 plastics. All of these types of plastic EDC's interfere with the function of sex hormones receptors. In THE GRADUATE Benjamin was quite a stud. I wonder if he's now taking one of the popular drugs to treat erectile dysfunction, a disorder that has become one of the many epidemics in our new plastic world.

In 2003 a group of Croatian scientists reported that phthalates in plastics dissolved in various solutions. They used a variety of plastic items, including plastic food containers. After 10 days of sitting in distilled water, an average of 55.4 mg/ of phthalates from each kilogram of plastic "migrated" into the water. To a lesser degree the phthalates from plastics dissolved into acetic acid 3% (44.4 mg/kg) and 10% ethyl alcohol (32.3 mg/kg).

The Croatian study shows what Benjamin would suspect, if he took chemistry in college: Water is the universal solvent; and it dissolves even the primarily fat soluble phthalates. The more that you filter water to remove other toxic solutes, the more aggressive water becomes in its power to reach osmolar equilibrium by dissolving its non-inert containers.

What is also obviously missing from the Croatians' controlled, static testing model are the temperature variations that the plastic bottled water product goes through to get from bottling point to the mouth of the consumer. Transport trucks probably reach a very high temperature in the non refrigerated cargo areas that carry PETE (recycle code #1 plastic) bottled water in the summer. Heat facilitates the dissolution of phthalates into the water. Then the bottles may be stored for a much longer time than 10 days prior to consumption. Furthermore, freezing the containers produces micro-fissures in the interior surface of the plastic bottle container as the water expands, exponentially exposing more solute surface area. Traumatic handling or any motion of the package will further enhance diffusion. Applying the laws of physics, all of these factors clearly by extrapolation will increase the water dissolution of the plastic containers.

Fatty foods in plastic containers are even more problematic, as fats are absorbed differently and carry their phthalate solvents into our bodies more easily. Phthalates bio-accumulate because of their fat solubility. Phthalates concentrate in such fat organs in our bodies such as brains, prostates, testicles, ovaries, breasts and, unfortunately, breast milk. (The other popular food alternatives for infants are worse. Commercial baby formulas are loaded with the manmade phthalates.)

I think the worst example of food containment in plastic is milk. All milk except non-fat milk contains fat. Cow milk itself represents a major source of the fats ingested by the public, especially children. Cattle concentrate these chemicals by bioaccummulation because EDC's from plastics are ubiquitous in water and most animal food sources. Meat and dairy products are therefore a major contributor to this group of human food chain derived toxins, regardless of their containment. It is now irresponsible to add more phathalates to the products by putting the milk products in plastic containers that add MORE EDC's.

Cattle have intentially been "fattened up" by adding hormones AND unintentially "fattened up" more by the contamination of cattle food and water by EDC's. The combination of these chemicals passed on to the consumers in concentrated form in milk products will most likely exacerbate obesity in humans that consume them as well.

Our current scientific knowledge and common sense screams for an end to consumer purchase of milk bottled in plastics. Until milk companies have their products quantatatively analysed for these EDC's by competent independant laboratories, my strong recommendation is to avoid purchase and consumption of milk and dairy products contained in plastic.

Sadly, the Croatian authors' 2003 conclusions about the safety of plastics were: "These (exposure) levels would not present a hazard for human health, not even for a prolonged period of time." However, what was deemed acceptable levels of phthalates in 2003 now is recognized as "crystal clearly" too high.

Selective interpretations from the ACC (American Chemistry Council) lead to this erroneously high level being "set" for past toxicity standards. The ACC is an "industry group" advisor. It's much like the wolf guarding the henhouse. Thanks to the ACC efforts, control regulations placed upon this chemical class are minimal. An ongoing perpetuation of phthalate approval for use in virtually everything, including containment of food, has resulted. In fact, the perpetuation of these mythological high safety standards has resulted in the majority of our food being wrapped or contained in plastics that leach EDC's into our foods.

The ACC's Phthalate Esters Panel is made up representatives from BASF, Eastman Chemical, Exxon-Mobil Chemical, Ferro, and Teknor Apex Corporations. After graduating, Benjamin could have gone to work for any of these companies to share the wealth that plastics manufacturing have reaped, instead of hanging around and sporting Mrs. Robinson for the summer!

I love one of the rationalization examples the ACC makes on their PHTHALATES INFORMATION CENTER webpage: "Thanks to phthalates, your nail polish doesn't chip." I wonder if they are aware of the "unexplained" high rate of breast cancer in manicurists. I also wonder if they are aware that most breast tissues and breast cancers have sex hormone receptors that are acted upon by the EDC's found in plastics.

To further confuse the public, the ACC webpage also redefines the PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE which in its un-perverted definition simply is: A (chemical) should not be considered safe until it is proven safe. Environmentalists who are trying to unravel the cause-effect relationships of environment chemicals, to the otherwise unexplained epidemics of various diseases now affecting man as well as every species on our planet, encourage its application. The ACC's watered down version suggests that cost effective, fearless risks are worth taking.

Can the ACC keep up the phthalate safety illusion forever? The American Tobacco Association almost got away with it!

We now know that EDC's, like hormones themselves require very minute amounts to have physiologic impact. EDC's are active in parts per trillion! For example, the usual adult maintenance dose of levothyroxine, a drug to replace depleted natural thyroid hormone in hypothyroidism, is 1.6 micrograms/Kg/day. Why would I even think about saying that a dose in the milligrams (1000 times as much as a microgram) of a known EDC would be safe, especially for a child or developing fetus?

We now know that phthalates also work in synergy with chemicals in other classes to exert "more than additive" physiologic effects.

Previous experiments in rodents showed that high levels of phthalates interfer with testosterone during gestation resulting in birth defects of the genitalia, testicular cancer, and infertility in the rats.

The ACC inspired acceptable level of phthalate myth should be blown out of the water with a recent study completed by the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. This study of 85 human infant boys reported in May 2005 showed that phthalate levels found normally in the general population adversely influenced sexual development. The phthalate exposure these children had correlated with smaller penis size and incomplete testicular descent, which is a condition that greatly increases the risk of testicular cancer if left untreated.

Solution 1 - Choose glass containers over plastic for purchase and storage of food and beverages including milk and water.

American children can consume several milligrams of phthalate each day.

I wonder if THE GRADUATE's Mr. Robinson noticed that most of the teenage girls now-days have bigger breasts than his seductive wife (gynecomastia), and that they begin thelarche (breast development) and menarche (menstruation) at a significantly younger age, or that many more have an endocrine pathology called PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome).

The chances of a woman getting breast cancer in her lifetime has probably gone from a risk of less than 1 in 10 (10%) before THE GRADUATE was made to a 1 in about 7.5 (13.2 %) rate today.

The choice to avoid food chain plastics is a "no-brainer" when you understand how these chemicals persist and accumulate in our environment, and how they function in our bodies!

Solution 2 - Choose stainless steel containers over plastic for storage of food and beverages including water.

Unfortunately, we are past the point of no return with phthalates. Just like
cigarettes I think we'll have to live as prisoners with their impact on future generations. The only defense we have at this time is to individually choose to avoid them when we can, to mitigate their effects on our health.

Phthalates clearly act upon hormone receptors in both men and women. A concern is the potential phthalate impact on breast and other hormone sensitive tissue in human females, but phthalate's demasculinizing potential on males is more of a threat to all species on the planet.

Unlike Mr. McGuire, I think we can choose a better future by avoiding his "one word." We should start by trying to reduce plastics in our food chain exposures.

Food Expo 2009 at Manila

Manila Food and Beverage Expo 2009

June 16, 2009, 7:23pm

Distinguished from agriculture as a separate industry, the food and beverage industry is now more focused on technology and mechanical manipulation of raw foods to create more value-added food products. It is composed of companies involved in processing raw food materials, manufacturing, packaging, and distributing food or drink – steps in food production after harvest and before retail purchase.

In the food industry, dairy products are the largest, followed by baked and cereal items, and chilled foods. The beverage segment is composed of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. Beer, cider, and other alcoholic beverages make up the bulk of the market. The food and beverages industry is very competitive and relies on advertising to promote brand names. Since the 1980’s, there have been many mergers and acquisitions of food and beverage companies, and the trend continues today as competition increases and consumers try to stretch their peso further. Another trend in the industry diversity in the Philippines is reflected in the food range available, with many Asian, European, American, and Middle Eastern-influenced specialty products. Worldwide, demand is also on the rise for this type of food as more people adopt a lifestyle which includes less time for the preparation of food.

We congratulate the participants and organizers of the Manila Food and Beverages Expo 2009 and wish them success in all their endeavors.