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thumbs up for meat alternative ingredient
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the uk joined the ongoing and heated debate about the meat alternative product quorn this week when the uk food standards agency (fsa) rejected claims by an american organisation that the mycoprotein quorn is unsafe. last month the us centre for science in the public interest (cspi) had asked the us food and drug administration (fda) to stop marketing quorn products and direct its parent company, britain's marlow foods, to recall all the products from supermarkets. the move followed reports from american and european consumers that they had experienced adverse reactions after eating quorn foods, which are made primarily from myco-protein, a vegetable protein. but food standards agency director of food safety policy jon bell told the cspi: "any protein-containing food has the potential to cause an allergic reaction. when quorn was approved for use in the uk some 15 years ago it was first in trial in the company's restaurant and then in one region of the uk. allergy clinics were asked to report any change in the normal pattern of food intolerance with which they were dealing at that time. as a result of these studies it was known that there was a low level of intolerance to the product amongst the uk population." "in a further study carried out in 1994 this was put at one in 200,000 so the latest figure of one in 146,000 is not unexpected and would not appear to change the position in any significant way. given this level of intolerance and the fact that some 13 million units of this product were sold in 2000 alone it is not really surprising that you have been able to find people who appear to be intolerant to it." "however, it is important to recognise that several commonly consumed foods and food ingredients have much higher intolerance levels than this. for example, the intolerance to soya is reported to be one in 300 and that to shellfish, even higher." in a statement this week the fsa said that on present evidence, the tolerance of one in 146,000, it would not prevent people from enjoying the quorn product and the uk consumer will still be able to purchase the meat alternative.
Source :Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch
Date :
4
September
2002
Category :
Codiments,Desserts,food additi
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there are no human health concerns over current dietary exposure to a range of fluorinated chemicals, such as pfos and pfoa, the uk food standards agency (fsa) has said the food safety watchdog came to its conclusion after testing a range of retail foods for fluorinated substances - including perfluorooctane sulphonate (pfos) and perfluorooctanoic acid (pfoa).
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a review of cloning is underway at the european food safety authority (efsa) following a request from the european commission for further advice on the implications of the technology for food safety, animal health and welfare and the environment. efsa has initiated a public consultation period to collate data to support the review, and the agency said that it aims to build on its july 2008 recommendations regarding clones.
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an advisory committee for japan's food safety regulator has said that food made from cloned animals is safe to eat. in april last year, the food safety commission was asked to deliberate on the matter by japan’s ministry of health. “foods derived from cloned cows and swine, and from the offspring of clones, are as safe as food from conventionally bred animals,” said the working group in its report published today.
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the uk government has set in motion a review of food policy and strategies with the publication of an analytical study on current and emerging food trends. among the analysis, the report found that the british diet has shifted considerably in recent history. while the origin of food is becoming a more important factor, people have been eating more pre-prepared foods in the last ten years.
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warranted or not, it comes as no surprise to learn that there is growing concern among uk consumers over food safety. according to new research from mintel, 41 per cent of adults were concerned about the safety of food in 1997, while in 2002 this figure has risen to 44 per cent of consumers. the report revealed that there is a considerable difference in attitude between men and women with over half of women (51 per cent) worried about food safety, compared to just 36 per cent of men.
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environmental campaigners urged the uk food standards agency (fsa) to improve its emergency system at yesterday's review meeting on the unauthorised gm rice incident. the meeting re-evaluated the fsa's handling of the discovery of the illegal ll rice 601, unapproved for human consumption, in american long grain rice supplies for export in august 2006. friends of the earth gm campaigner clare oxborrow said: "the incident revealed a vulnerability with the agency's lack of knowledge on the structure of the market and where the major food products went to.
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the uk food standards agency (fsa) is to propose a strategy this week for the control of mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (map) in milk. map is a bacterium that is known to cause a chronic gastrointestinal infection called johne\'s disease in cattle and other ruminants. it is also implicated in crohn\'s disease in humans, a chronic bowel inflammation condition. a study commissioned by the fsa found that map was present in around 2 per cent of pasteurised milk.
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Coca.Cola
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PEPSI
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Mcdonald
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Nestle
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Mars
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Baskin & Robins
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Nutrika
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Mumika
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Chika
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