Tag: Monosodium glutamate

  • Maggi Pizzas Have Pig Harmful Chemicals Deadly Side Effects

    Now Maggi is in the News for its ingredients contain Lead and other chemicals harmful to Health.
    It has been taken off the shelf from UP,Delhi, Kerala and tamil Nadu is about to ban it.
    Maggi noodles.jpg Maggi noodles
    
    We had earlier the issue of Johnson and Johnson for similar offences.
    
    Oreo cookies,which was banned in the US as early as in the Thirties!
    I have been writing on this issue , Coke,Maggi,Pepsi and other Health Drinks.
    No body sees to bother .
    Excepion is my Five year Grandson who refuses all these saying that his Boss Thatha(that's me!) told him they are harmful)
    
    I am providing soe information received from my friend below and right after it information from a reliable sites.
    
    As they say in Tamil, I have blown the Whisle(Saangu, Conch)
    Upto You.
    
    Life bouy is neither bath soap nor toilet soap ! 
    But it's a Cabolic soap used for bathing animals !
    Europe uses Life bouy for Dogs ! And in our country millions of humans use it !
    That Coke, Pepsi is  reality toilet cleaner ! it has been proved that it contains 21 types  of different poisons ! And it's sale is banned in the canteen of indian parliament ! But it is sold in whole country !!
    
    That foreign companies selling health tonics like Boost
    Complan
    Horlics
    Maltova
    Protin-ex., were tested in Delhi at All India Institute (which houses biggest laboratory in india) and it was found that it is made from the waste left after oil is extracted from Groundnut ! Which is food for animals ! From this waste they make health tonic !!
    
    
    When Amitabh Bachhan was operated in hospital for 10 long hours !
    Doctor had to cut and remove large intestine !! and doctor had told him that it has rotten due to drinking of soft drinks like Coke, Pepsi ! And then he stopped advertising coke
    pepsi !
    
     
    Let's have a look over pizza companies
    
    "Pizza Hut
    Dominos
    KFC
    McDonalds
    Pizza Corner
    Papa John’s Pizza
    California Pizza Kitchen
    Sal’s Pizza"
    
    These are all american companies,
    
    Note:- to make Pizza tasty...
    E-631 flavor Enhancer is added which is made from Pork or Pig meat.
    
    ● Attention friends if following codes are mentioned on food packs then you should know what you are unknowingly consuming.
    
    E 322 - Beef
    E 422 - Alcohol
    E 442 - Alcohol & Chemical
    E 471 - Beef & Alcohol 
    E 476 - Alcohol
    E 481 - mixture of Beef and Pork 
    E 627 - Dangerous Chemical
    E 472 - mixture of Beef, meat & Pork 
    E 631 - Oil extracted from Pig fats.
    
    ● Note - you will find these codes mostly in products of foreign companies like :- Chips , Biscuits , Chewing Gums, Toffees, Kurkure and Maggi !
    
    ● Don't ignore pay your kind attention atleast for the well being of your kids, if in doubt then search by yourself through your sources if not internet. (Google)
    
    ● Look at ingredient on Maggi pack, you will find flavor (E-635 ).
    
    ● Also look for following codes on Google :-
    
    E100, E110, E120, E140, E141, E153, E210, E213, E214, E216, E234, E252, E270, E280, E325, E326, E327, E334, E335, E336, E337, E422, E430, E431, E432, E433, E434, E435, E436, E440, E470, E471, E472, E473, E474, E475, E476, E477, E478, E481, E482, E483, E491, E492, E493, E494, E495, E542, E570, E572, E631, E635, E904.

    Food-Info.net> E-numbers > E600-700

    E635 : Sodium ribonucleotides

    Origin:
    Mixture of sodium salts of guanylic (E626) and inosinic acid (E630).Function & Characteristics:
    Flavour enhancer. Guanylates and inosinates do not have the specific umami taste but strongly enhance many other flavours, thereby reducing the amounts of salt or other flavour enhancers needed in a product.

    Products:
    Used in many products. Mainly used in low sodium/salt products.

    Acceptable daily intake (ADI):
    None determined. Guanylates and inosinates may not be used in products intended for children under 12 weeks.

    Side effects:
    Asthmatic people should avoid guanylates and inosinates. As guanylates and inosinates are metabolised to purines, they should be avoided by people suffering from gout. However, the concentrations used are generally so low that no effects are to be expected.

    Dietary restrictions:
    Guanylates and inosinates are generally produced from meat, but partly also from fish. They are thus not suitable for vegans and vegetarians, and in most cases not suitable for Jews, Muslims and Hindus, depending on the origin of the product. Only the producer can provide information on the origin.”

    Beware Maggi Lovers : Cooking Maggi Noodles in wrong way is very dangerous for health.

    There is a certain way to cook maggi. You may be thinking whats new in this but the cooking process which is shown behind the packet maybe right but it is surely harmful to your body because maggi noodles are coated with Wax which harms us and takes 3 to 4 days to excrete the wax which is harmful. The ingredient called Msg can make you fat and fat people kknow how much difficult it is to loose their weight. Maggi should not be given to young children as they are also harmful to them.

    Normally, how we cook the instant noodles is to put the noodles into a pot with water, throw in the powder and let it cook for around 3 minutes and then it’s ready to eat. This is the WRONG way and dangerous method of cooking the instant noodles like Maggi. By doing this, when we actually boil the ingredients in the powder,normally with MSG, it will change the molecular structure of the MSG, causing it to be toxic. The other thing that you may or may not realize is that, the noodles are coated with wax and it will take around 4 to 5 days for the body to excrete the wax after you have eaten the noodles.

    CORRECT METHOD OF COOKING MAGGI:

    The correct way to cook instant noodles without harming our bodies and health is
    1. Boil the noodles in a pot of water.
    2. Once the noodles are cooked, take out the noodles, and throw away the water which contains wax.
    3. Boil another pot of water, add the cooked noodles into the hot boiling water and then turn off the stove.
    4. Only at this stage when the stove is off, and while the water is very hot, add the flavouring powder into the water, to make noodle soup.
    5. However, if you need dry noodles, remove the noodles and add the flavoring powder and toss it to get dry noodles.

    2. Maggi is non vegetarian

    Maggi contains MSG (Monosodium glutamate) used as a flavor enhancer, which is made? using Bactosoytone, itself made from soy protein using a catalyst enzyme porcine (taken from intestine of Pig). Chemically, catalyst never goes in the molecular structure of Bactosoytone, hence it’s Vegetarian for Nestle. MSG as such is harmful to health. Maggi also launched no-MSG series known as Vegetable Atta-Maggie, but that’s just a makeover.

    Atta Maggie contains? DSG (DiSodium Glutamate), which does contain Bactosoytone. Not written in ingredients as such, hidden under alias Flavor-627. Maggi also contains flavour enhancers E 631 and E 635. Also a huge number of popular packed foods such as Magginoodles, biscuits etc and even other products such as toothpaste, soaps etc contain animal fat in them, that too, mostly PIG FAT.

    “Disodium glutamate is produced from dried fish or dried seaweed and is often added to instant noodles, potato chips and other snacks, savouryrice, tinned vegetables, cured meats, and packaged soup”.

    Monosodium glutamate (MSG – E621) is a flavor enhancer commonly added to Chinesefood, canned vegetables, soups and processed meats.

    The following table indicates additives which are always derived from animals.

    E Number Additive Name
    120 Cochineal, Carminic acid, Carmines Natural Red 4 – colouring
    A colouring that makes many foods red. Found in alcoholic drinks, fruit pie fillings, jams, many sweets and even cheeses. Cochineal is made from the female insect found on cacti called Dactylopius Coccus. She is boiled alive or left to “cook” alive through sun exposure. Cochineal is the result of crushing scales of the insect into a red powder.
    441 Gelatine – Emulsifier / Gelling Agent
    You may not find this E number 441 on food ingredients listings anymore because instead of an additive, Gelatine has now been classed as food (made of animal skin and hoofs) in it’s own right. Remember, all types of gelatine are animal based and can be found in dairy products like yoghurts, plus many kinds of confectionery, jellies and other sweets.
    542 Bone phosphate – Anti-caking agent
    631 Disodium inosinate – Flavour enhancer
    Almost always made from animals and fish
    635 Disodium 5′-ribonucleotides – Flavour enhancer
    Often made from animals
    901 Beeswax – white and yellow – Glazing Agent
    Not suitable for Vegans.
    966 Lactitol – Sweetener
    Derived from Lactose, commercially prepared using whey, so unsuitable for vegans.

    (Source)

    The video belows shows the dangers of Monosodium glutamate (MSG)

    The Dangers of MSG – Part 1 ‘The Hidden Danger in Your Food’ (Flavor Enhancers E621 side effects)

    FOOD ADDITIVE CODE BREAKER & SIDE EFFECTS – FLAVOR ENHANCERS, MSG


    Number Name Comments
    E620 L-Glutamic acid might cause similar problems as MSG(621), young children should avoid it
    E621 Monosodium glutamate (MSG) can be an allergen, not permitted in foods for infants and young children
    E622 Monopotassium glutamate can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea , abdominal cramps. Typical products are low sodium salt substitutes
    E627 Disodiumguanylate not permitted in foods for infants and young children
    E631 Disodium inosinate not permitted in foods for infants and young children
    E635 Sodium 5’ribonucleotide not permitted in Australia

    (Source)Why used in maggi ??

    Pigs skin juice is used for bringing taste to maggi ans other flavour enhancers are listed in the above tables which play an important role in bringing the taste to the Maggi.

    Simple experiment to try at home if you are non vegetarian:-
    Boil chicken maggi soup powder and vegetarian maggi noodles masala powder

    After boiling, taste both of them. They will taste the same.
    (Source)

    3. Why Jain and Vaishnav people can’t eat Maggi??

    People who follow jain and vaishnav religion can’t eat Maggi because it contains Onion and Garlic powder in it.

    4. Other Foods which contains animals

    • Albumen: This is the white of egg and is commonly used on bread and confectionary.
    • Ajinomoto: Made from fish. Used as a sauce or in Chinese food.
    • Cheese: Most foreign cheeses are made by using stomach acids obtained from the slitting the stomachs of calves while alive.
    • Chewing gum: Usually made of vegetable gum but may contain glycerine, gelatine, stearic acid and emulsifiers of animal origin. Check on the label.
    • Chips: Always fried in animal fat abroad at all fast food eateries. Packaged Indian crisps must specify that they are cooked in vegetable oils or assume that they are not.
    • Chocolates: The most commonly used animal ingredients in chocolates are egg white, egg lecithin, shellac and gelatine. Nestle’s Kitkat is made of calf rennet. Turkish Delight, fruit rolls, toffees, marshmallows, jujubes, peppermints usually contain gelatine. Polo Mints contain beef. So do most Western sweets that come in via the Middle East. Smarties contain cochineal.
    • Colas: May use ester gum as emulsifiers. Ester gum’s main ingredient is glycerol. Coca Cola admits to using glycerine.
    • Ice-cream: Unless specifically listed as vegetarian, the ice cream contains eggs and gelatine obtained by boiling cattle udders, noses and anuses. Amul and Baskin Robbins are vegetarian.
    • Jam: Jammay contain gelatine
    • Jelly: Jelly is always made of gelatine. In fact the word jelly is a short form of gelatine. A few companies make it from vegetable gum and mark it as vegetarian jelly. Look for the label.
    • Varakh: This is made by beating silver between fresh hot cow/buffalo intestines. Each piece of varakh contains specks of intestine.
    • Riboflavin: This is used as a orange-yellow colouring agent. It is obtained from egg yolk or liver. It can also come from vegetables but that is expensive. Check with the manufacturer.
    • Worcester Sauce: It contains small fish called anchovies.
    Reference.
    http://www.food-info.net/uk/e/e635.htm
    
    Guruprasad
    
    http://foodie-funda.blogspot.in/2013/06/why-all-vegetarians-vegans-should-know.html
    
    
    
  • Health Some Myths More To Come

    My readers are probably aware of my attitude to Science, that is, Science t best is a currently working hypothesis, not necessarily correct, but works till some ting better is discovered(!) by Science .

    Myths on Food.
    Food Myths.

    More so with Science on Health.

    Look at some of the volte face on the flowing.

    1. Coffee,Tea Drinking.

    2. Presence of salt in Tooth Paste,

    3. Various theories on Cancer, Carcinogens.

    4. Cholesterol , a factor in Heart attacks.

    5. Psychological theories for Obesity in general.

    The list is long.

    Now here are some of the Myths on Food, debunked by Science-till some one else disproves this!

    So let us hear them and, I ,for one, follow what my ancestors have developed over hundreds of years on Food.

    Story:

    1.Eating fatty Foods.

    Eating fatty foods does not make you fat. Fat in moderation is a necessary part of any healthy and balanced diet. Putting on more weight in the form of fat is a result of energy imbalance. You will gain weight if you take in more calories than you burn. Fat is a concentrated source of calories, but it is not necessary to eliminate fat from your diet completely.

    2.

    Bellatti agrees, providing a little context as to why we might look at fat as a problem:P

    Sheer lunacy. Whole-food fats (nuts, seeds, avocado) are satiating and help you feel fuller for a longer period of time. You can’t put French fries and almonds in the same category simply because both are “high in fat.

     

    2.Eating Carbohydrates.

    If eating fat won’t make you fat, carbohydrates must! Right? Carbs, the devil of our current decade, get cut from just about every new fad diet to promote super fast fat loss. Again, the truth comes down to striking a healthy balance. Dr. Nadolsky explains why a healthy amount of carbohydrates don’t really cause a problem:P

    While it is becoming more popular to blame carbohydrates as the cause of obesity, people don’t realize that de novo lipogenesis (DNL; which converts sugars into fat) tends to be inefficient in human bodies. For carbs to make one fat, they would need to work in concert with a poor diet and lack of exercise which makes those latter two more readily blamed.

    3.MSG.

    Monosodium glutamate, or MSG, has a sordid past. Many Americans look at MSG as anything from a dietary problem to a silent killer. In reality, if MSG poses a problem it doesn’t stem from the flavor enhancer itself, but where you tend to find it. Bellatti explains:P

    Yes and no. Some people don’t respond to it well. My main thing with MSG is that it’s a marker for highly processed foods.

    Source:

    http://lifehacker.com/10-health-myths-that-just-wont-die-debunked-by-scienc-1443659706?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+lifehacker%2Ffull+%28Lifehacker%29

  • Dangerous Additives In Food List.

    I am posting some dangerous additives that are used in Fast Foods, Packeted Food, Ready to eat.

    Check the composition of the Product and avoid those that contain the following ingredients.

    For the side effects of these additives, check Wiki ,FDA,webmd sites.

    The list.

    Some dangerous food Additives.
    Dangerous Food Additives.
    • acesulfame-K (acesulfame potassium)
    • acetylated esters of mono- and diglycerides
    • ammonium chloride
    • artificial colors
    • artificial flavors
    • aspartame
    • azodicarbonamide
    • benzoates in food
    • benzoyl peroxide
    • BHA (butylated hydroxyanisole)
    • BHT (butylated hydroxytoluene)
    • bleached flour
    • bromated flour
    • brominated vegetable oil (BVO)
    • calcium bromate
    • calcium disodium EDTA
    • calcium peroxide
    • calcium propionate
    • calcium saccharin
    • calcium sorbate
    • calcium stearoyl-2-lactylate
    • caprocaprylobehenin
    • carmine
    • certified colors
    • cyclamates
    • cysteine (l-cysteine), as an additive for bread products
    • DATEM (Diacetyl tartaric and fatty acid esters of mono and diglycerides)
    • dimethylpolysiloxane
    • dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate (DSS)
    • disodium calcium EDTA
    • disodium dihydrogen EDTA
    • disodium guanylate
    • disodium inosinate
    • EDTA
    • ethyl vanillin
    • ethylene oxide
    • ethoxyquin
    • FD & C colors
    • foie gras
    • GMP (disodium guanylate)
    • hexa-, hepta- and octa-esters of sucrose
    • high fructose corn syrup
    • hydrogenated fats
    • IMP (disodium inosinate)
    • irradiated foods
    • lactylated esters of mono- and diglycerides
    • lead soldered cans
    • methyl silicon
    • methylparaben
    • microparticularized whey protein derived fat substitute
    • monosodium glutamate (MSG)
    • natamycin
    • nitrates/nitrites
    • partially hydrogenated oil
    • polydextrose
    • potassium benzoate
    • potassium bisulfite
    • potassium bromate
    • potassium metabisulfite
    • potassium sorbate
    • propionates
    • propyl gallate
    • propylparaben
    • saccharin
    • sodium aluminum sulfate
    • sodium benzoate
    • sodium bisulfite
    • sodium diacetate
    • sodium glutamate
    • sodium nitrate/nitrite
    • sodium propionate
    • sodium stearoyl-2-lactylate
    • sodium sulfite
    • solvent extracted oils, as standalone single-ingredient oils (except grapeseed oil).
    • sorbic acid
    • sucralose
    • sucroglycerides
    • sucrose polyester
    • sulfites (sulfur dioxide)
    • TBHQ (tertiary butylhydroquinone)
    • tetrasodium EDTA
    • vanillin

      Source:

    • http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/about-our-products/quality-standards/unacceptable-ingredients-food

    http://www.medindia.net/patients/lifestyleandwellness/top-12-dangerous-food-additives.htm

    http://ramanisblog.in/2013/05/15/why-johnson-johnson-baby-powder-licence-revoked/

  • Avoid these Dangerous Food Additives.

    Home cooking is now being replaced by fast food,Ready to eat and Restaurant Foods.

    Food that is available in these are being produced  in bulk and none can estimate the required quantity to be prepared.

    To ensure shelf life and enhance taste artificially additives are used in the preparations.

    I understand from the manufacturers of Sweets made from Milk that any sweet prepared from Milk shall become unfit for consumption after 3 days from the date of preparation-even if you keep them in Fridge.

    Despite assurances to the contrary by manufacturers,packed food once opened must be consumed immediately.

    Additives are also used to camouflage the staleness of the spoiled food by adding strong additives which are astringent that would mask the taste/odour of the spoiled food.

    Best is to prepare food at Home .

    Otherwise buy the minimum quantity and consume immediately.

    I am providing here below a list of Additives which are harmful to Health.

    Artificial Sweeteners

    Acesulfame-KUsed in candies, baked goods, chewing gum, dry beverage mixes, canned fruit, gelatin desserts, diet soda, and as a tabletop sweetener under the brand names Sunette and Sweet One. About 200 times sweeter than sugar, acesulfame-K was tested for safety in the 1970s. The tests were not conducted with gold-standard protocols; however, two rat studies suggested that the chemical could cause cancer. In addition, large doses of a breakdown product from this chemical affected the thyroid in test animals.

    Aspartame: Used in breakfast cereals, soft drinks, drink mixes, gelatin desserts, frozen desserts, yogurt, chewing gum, diet foods, and as a tabletop sweetener under the brand names Equal and NutraSweet. Used in more than 6,000 products worldwide, aspartame is 200 times sweeter than sugar. Studies have suggested that it might cause cancer — especially with lifelong consumption — or neurological problems. Aspartame also lowers the acidity of urine and may make the urinary tract more susceptible to infection.

    Saccharin: Used in many diet products as well as a tabletop sweetener under the brand name Sweet’N Low. About 350 times sweeter than sugar, saccharin has been shown in animal studies to cause bladder cancer; rodent studies indicate that saccharin can cause cancer of the uterus, ovaries, skin, blood vessels and more. A major study conducted by the National Cancer Institute found that the artificial sweeteners saccharin and cyclamate are associated with higher incidence of bladder cancer. In 1977 the FDA wanted to ban saccharin; however, industry pressure has kept it in circulation.

    Dyes and Colorings

    Caramel coloring: Found in colas, baked goods, precooked meats, gravy mix, soy and Worcestershire sauces, chocolate-flavored products, liquors, syrups, wine, and beer. The most widely used (by weight) dye, caramel coloring is often made by heating sugars with ammonium compounds, acids or alkalis, and it contains contaminants that have been shown by the U.S. National Toxicology Program to cause cancer in male and female mice. In 2011 the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a division of the World Health Organization, concluded that caramel coloring, when produced with ammonia, contains contaminants that are “possibly carcinogenic to humans.” Avoid beverages with caramel coloring, since the amounts consumed in one drink are so large.

    Yellow 5: Used in gelatin desserts, candy, pet food and baked goods. This is the second most widely used coloring. It causes allergy-like hypersensitivity reactions, primarily in aspirin-sensitive persons, and triggers hyperactivity in some children. It may also be contaminated with cancer-causing substances.

    Yellow 6: Used in beverages, candy and baked goods. This is the third most widely used dye. Industry-sponsored animal tests indicated that this dye causes tumors of the adrenal gland and kidney. Like Yellow 5, it may also be contaminated with cancer-causing chemicals. Yellow 6 may also cause sometimes-severe hypersensitivity reactions.

    Blue 2: Found in pet food, beverages and candy. Some animal studies found evidence that Blue 2 causes brain cancer in male rats. Blue 2 and other artificial colorings are made from petroleum, much of it refined near China’s Yellow River Delta, one of the world’s most toxic polluted areas.

    Preservatives and Additives

    Partially hydrogenated vegetable oil and hydrogenated vegetable oil (commonly called trans fats): Used to make packaged foods more appealing and last longer. Trans fats — created by converting liquid oils to solids by adding hydrogen — are found in crackers, baked goods, fried restaurant foods, stick margarine, icing and microwave popcorn. Trans fats can raise blood cholesterol to dangerous levels; Harvard School of Public Health researchers estimate that trans fat has caused about 50,000 premature heart-attack deaths annually, making partially hydrogenated oil one of the most harmful ingredients in the food supply. When the public heard about the danger and the FDA required that trans fats be listed on labels beginning in 2006, consumption dropped and many food manufacturers have moved to safer ingredients. Still, read labels carefully, since even small amounts of trans fats are harmful.

    Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA): A synthetic antioxidant found in butter, cereals, baked goods, sweets, beer, vegetable oils, potato chips, snack foods, nuts and nut products, glazed fruits, chewing gum, animal feeds, and sausage, poultry and meat products. BHA slows the deterioration of flavors and odors in foods — especially in those containing vegetable and animal fat — and increases shelf life. In studies, three different species of lab animals developed cancer from exposure to BHA, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services considers BHA “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.”

    Propyl gallate: A preservative used in vegetable oil, mayonnaise, meat products, chicken soup base and chewing gum. Propyl gallate slows the spoilage of fats and oils but can cause stomach or skin problems for asthmatics and aspirin-sensitive people. Studies on rats and mice suggest that this preservative might cause cancer.

    Sodium nitrite and sodium nitrate: Preservatives, colorings and flavorings used in bacon, ham, hot dogs, cold cuts, smoked fish and corned beef. These chemicals give certain foods their characteristic flavor and color; they also prevent botulism, although critics argue that safer ingredients do the same thing. Several studies have linked consumption of cured meat and nitrite by children, pregnant women and adults with various types of cancer.

    Other

    Monosodium glutamate (MSG): A flavor enhancer used in meats, condiments, soups and baked goods. Tests in the 1960s showed that MSG caused brain damage in lab animals; after that, baby-food manufacturers removed it from their products. Perhaps the biggest danger MSG poses
    is to people with asthma, who may suffer a temporary increase in symptoms after consumption. MSG is what’s called a “free glutamate” — one of the amino acids. There are other forms of free glutamates present as additives in processed food, including hydrolyzed vegetable proteins, soy extracts, protein isolates and “natural flavorings.”

    Mycoprotein: A synthetic meat marketed under the brand name Quorn, it can be purchased in the form of sausages, burgers and other meat-like products, or folded into vegan and vegetarian meals, such as casseroles and curries. Fabricated from fungus grown in vats and then dried and woven into “meat,” mycoprotein, according to the Center for Science in the Public Interest, can provoke allergic reactions as powerful as those caused by more common food allergens such as peanuts, soy and dairy. To date, the CSPI has received 1,500 adverse-reaction reports to mycoprotein, including accounts of severe vomiting.

    http://www.experiencelife.com/issues/november-2011/healthy-eating/secret-ingredients.php