A Preservative Deficiency.

2

Posted by Ken | Posted in Bad Health Habits, Food-less food, Toxins, Worldview | Posted on 19-08-2012

Tags: , , , , ,

Preservatives Kill living things, it strange that people eat food to stay alive yet also eat food that have preservative added such as: Sodium Benzoate, Sodium nitrate, Potassium Sorbate, Disodium EDTA, Sulfur dioxide, Sodium bisulfite, Potassium hydrogen sulfite, Asorbic acid (the synthetic form of vitamin C), Ethanol and methylchloroisothiazolinone, nitrates, nitrites, monosodium glutamate, DHA and BHT. Preservatives may be antimicrobial, which inhibit the growth of bacteria or fungi, including mold. Choose organic and preservative free food for your self and family.  Did you know that no one has ever been found to have a preservative deficiency?  or   Did you know that no one has a deficiency of anything  that kills healthy cells?

 

.

Marketplace ministry. Has your church or nonprofit organization had a decline in contributions lately?

0

Posted by Ken | Posted in Bad Health Habits, Food-less food, Garden, Natural Vitamins, NutriVerus, Vitamins | Posted on 15-06-2012

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

 

 

GoldMail Player
http://play.goldmail.com/y2jueb1827gh

Caramel coloring used in some sodas & foods has 2 carcinogens

0

Posted by Ken | Posted in Bad Health Habits, Food-less food, Toxins | Posted on 16-11-2011

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD
WebMD Health News
caramel corn product

Feb. 16, 2011 — Two types of caramel coloring used in some sodas and foods contain two carcinogens and should be banned, according to the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI).

“We are calling on the FDA to ban the use of caramel coloring in colas and certain other foods,” CSPI Executive Director Michael F. Jacobson said during a teleconference.

The caramel coloring used in some sodas is manufactured via a chemical reaction between sugars, ammonia, and sulfates. These reactions produce the two carcinogens: 2-methylimidazole (2-MEI) and 4-methylimidazole (4-MEI), he says. These chemicals have been shown to cause cancer in mice and rats.

Representatives from the beverage industry and from the Coca-Cola Company reject the claims that the additives are dangerous, and Coca-Cola notes in a statement to WebMD that 4-MEI “forms normally in the ‘browning reaction’ while cooking, even in one’s own kitchen.”

Jacobson says that 2-MEI and 4-MEI “are not potent carcinogens, but it is totally inappropriate to accept any risk from artificial coloring that has no nutritional or preservative value.”

Natural alternatives — including dark colorings from beets or carrots — do exist, he says. Alternatively, the soda industry could market clear colas.

Dr. Manny Said the same thing: http://bit.ly/tozIzl

Recipe for Soda: Carbonation, Caffeine, & Carcinogens?It’s no secret that soda comes with heaps of sugar and caffeine, but does it also come with a sprinkling of carcinogens?

The state of California has already added 4-MEI to its list of carcinogens and is seeking out legislation that would require a warning label for products containing over 16 milligrams of the additive.

Some sodas contain over eight times that amount, according to the CSPI.

Representatives from the beverage industry and the Coca-Cola Company maintain that 2-MEI and 4-MEI are not dangerous.  In a statement, the Coca-Cola Company said that 4-MEI “forms naturally in a browning reaction while cooking – even in one’s own kitchen.”

CSPI Executive Director Michael Jacobson said that while the two chemicals were not potent carcinogens, it was inappropriate to accept any risk from artificial coloring lacking any nutritional or preservative value.

While the FDA typically moves slow on issues, he said, he expected that they would try to persuade soda companies to use natural colorings.

 

 

“Natural” mean anything anymore?

0

Posted by Ken | Posted in Food-less food, Label reading, Vitamins | Posted on 19-10-2011

Tags: , , , , ,

Does “Natural” mean anything anymore? http://bit.ly/o9hBlv Look at Vitamins & cereals

The ICE CREAM Story

0

Posted by Ken | Posted in Children, Food-less food | Posted on 14-10-2011

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

THE ICE CREAM STORY

By Ken Anderson

As a child we did it this way, by hand from raw milk and fresh eggs.

From the lapping up of snow with a few squirts of raw cow’s milk for flavoring to today’s embalmed, synthetic and chemical flavored, puffed up sugared ice cream, we’ve come a long way, baby! Marco Polo brought a recipe back from his travels at the end of the 13th century. Nancy Johnson, in 1846, invented the crank and paddle freezer for making home made ice cream. Jacob Fussell is the father of mass-produced ice cream. In 1851, Fussell, a Baltimore milk dealer, found himself with a bankruptcy-threatening oversupply of cream. Fussell turned the surplus into ice cream, vending it at an unheard-of bargain of 25 cents a quart. Soon he’d dumped the milk business entirely to concentrate on ice cream. By 1899 the American ice cream industry was making 5 million gallons a year.

http://tinyurl.com/3fwvpg8

Today, the average American consumes 24 quarts of ice cream a year. Today there are more than 1400 flavorings, colors, stabilizers, and emulsifiers available to the commercial producer of ice cream – an array of possible ingredients that would have dizzied the old-lime ice cream makers who dealt primarily with cream, sugar, and various flavorings. Ice cream manufacturers are not required by law to list the additives used in the manufacture of their product. Consequently, today most ice creams are synthetic from start to finish. Ice cream makers are giving us a wide variety of delicious flavors. BUT ARE THEY FIT TO EAT? There’s hardly any ice cream flavor that doesn’t have a chemical substitute. Some of the artificial flavors are potent poisons, powerful enough to cause liver, kidney and heart damage. The flavors range from apple butter to zabaglione. The Polly Ann parlor in San Francisco has pioneered vegetable-flavored ice creams, offering spinach and tomato among its 295 flavors. Top seller, though, is American Rose, which its promoters say “tastes like a rose smells.” Some ice creams contain natural flavorings; some contain a mixture of natural and artificial flavors; and some are entirely artificially flavored. In the trade, as well as by Federal regulation, naturally flavored ice creams are identified as:

Category I; The ice-cream label reads, say,” Vanilla.”

Category II; A combination of natural and artificial flavors; the package reads “Vanilla flavored.”

All-artificial flavoring is Category III; These ice creams are labeled “Artificially flavored vanilla.”

The Ratings identify the category of each ice cream. Peperonal is used in place of vanilla. This is a chemical used to kill lice.Vanillin is also a chemical used to produce a vanilla flavor. It is made from the wastes of wood pulp and has no relationship to the vanilla bean. Natural vanilla, in the form of pureed vanilla beans or vanilla extract, is more expensive than artificial vanilla. That explains why many of the vanillas are flavored artificially, either entirely or in part. Benzyl acetate is a synthetic chemical that imparts a strawberry flavor. According to the Merck Index, an encyclopedia for chemists, it warns that this substance can cause vomiting and diarrhea. It is also a nitrate solvent. Ethyl acetate is used by many manufacturers to give their product a pineapple flavor. This is a substance that can cause liver, kidney and heart damage. It is also used as a cleaner for leather and textiles, and its vapors have been known to cause chronic lung, liver and heart damage. Then there’s amylbutyrate to replace banana. It’s also used as an oil paint solvent. Aldehyde c 17 is used to flavor cherry ice cream. It is an inflammable liquid which is used in aniline dyes, plastic and rubber. Butraldehyde is used in nut-flavored ice cream. It’s one of the ingredients in rubber cement. Diethyl glycol is the same chemical used in antifreeze and in paint removers. Because it is cheap it is used in ice cream as an emulsifier instead of eggs. According to the Merck Index, it is sufficiently toxic to cause liver and kidney damage. Chemical additives as propylene glycol (the antifreeze constituent), glycerin, sodium carboxy methylcellulose (a cellulose), monoglycerides, diglycerides, disodium phosphates, tetrasodium pyrophosphate, polysorbate 80, and dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate are all permitted by law. Most of these additives are used as “stabiliers” and “emulsifiers.”  Stabilizers make ice cream smooth; emulsifiers make it stiff so it can retain air. Of course, pumping air into ice cream increases its volume. Two batches of mix weighing the same but containing different amounts of air take up different amounts of space. The batch with more air naturally appears greater in quantity. And since ice cream is sold by volume it is possible to make a little mix fill a lot of half-gallon or gallon cartons. But air does more than alter ice cream’s size. It effects its taste. Each manufacturer has his own formula for the amount of air (“percentage of over-run” in trade jargon) that makes “the best” ice cream. Ice creams contain from 40 per cent to 60 per cent over-run (air).Too little air makes a heavy ice cream. Too much air makes a foamy ice cream. By law, a gallon of ice cream must weigh at least 4.5 pounds. Home made ice cream and the natural ice creams on the market are heavy and weigh about 7 to 8-1/2 pounds a gallon. The next time you’re tempted by a luscious-looking banana split (or to let your belly be your god), think of it as a mixture of oil and nitrate solvent, antifreeze and lice killer, and you won’t find it so appetizing. *******************************

August 18  Ben and Jerry’s ice cream contains high dioxin levels – study LOS ANGELES, Aug 17 (AFP)   http://www.rense.com/general3/ben.htm – Ben and Jerry’s gourmet ice cream has levels of dioxin 2,200 times higher than those authorised for waste water discharged into San Francisco Bay from a nearby refinery, according to a study released Thursday. The study, presented Thursday at a ‘Dioxin 2000′ conference in Monterey, California, estimated that the concentration of dioxin found in Ben and Jerry’s could account for 200 “extra” cases of cancer among lifetime consumers of the ice cream. The study, completed by one former government scientist and confirmed by an independent laboratory, singled out the contradiction between the firm’s promotional material for the ice cream, and the product’s potentially harmful contents. Ben and Jerry’s Homemade, the company which makes the ice cream, has been well-known for its much-vaunted attitude of social responsibility — reflecting the views of its original owners. In April, Dutch conglomerate Unilever acquired the company for 326 million dollars. The Ben and Jerry’s website cites a Greenpeace warning on the dangers of dioxin in the atmosphere. The study said that a serving of Ben and Jerry’s ice cream was found to contain 80 picograms of dioxin. “In contrast, the Tosco Refinery wastewater is permitted to contain 0.14 picograms of dioxin per liter,” said Michael Gough, the leader author of the study. Gough is a former chair of a US Health and Human Services advisory panel which looked at the effects of dioxin-contaminated Agent Orange on US Air Force personnel in Vietnam. He and co-author Steven Milloy of Junkscience.com said they believe existing scientific evidence does not credibly link low levels of dioxin exposure with human health effects. But they criticised the company for a product which was in conflict with its own promotional literature. “Ben and Jerry’s and Greenpeace … have concluded that dioxin is not safe at any level. “If dioxin is so dangerous, perhaps Ben and Jerry’s should removed its ice cream from the market until it is ‘safe,’ consistent with the company’s promotional literature,” Milloy suggested. Christine Heimert, a spokeswoman for Ben and Jerry’s at its headquarters in South Burlington, Vermont, said: “This is not a food safety issue … The fact is dioxins are global environmental pollutants. “They exist worldwide primarily as a result of certain industrial practices, and they do in fact make their way into the food chain … especially (in) dairy products.” Federal authorities have not laid down a limit for dioxin levels in food, she noted, adding that the only reason the study’s authors “have singled us out (is) because we have taken a very public stance on dioxin.” The Ben and Jerry’s website warns that “dioxin is known to cause cancer, genetic and reproductive defects, and learning disabilities … The only safe level of dioxin exposure is no exposure at all.” Copyright © 1994-2000 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. From: http://www.cgl.uwaterloo.ca/~smann/IceCream/Shame/storebought.html