Health knowledge made personal
Join this community!
› Share page: Email Digg del.icio.us Reddit icon StumbleUpon Technorati
Go
Search posts:

The Gluten-Free Homemaker's Twitter Updates

Sounds good! RT @artchair: I'm very hopeful about tonight's #gfree Hungarian carrot and squash stew w/quinoa. http://tinyurl.com/yene73e 6 days ago
@kbouldin I like glutino. Some non gf friends tried them recently and said, "They taste just like pretzels!" 6 days ago
Great list of #gfree turkeys. RT @kbouldin: Gluten-free turkey information: http://bit.ly/3EtpgL #gf #celiac #glutenfree #thanksgiving 6 days ago
I hope I win the $100 Lowe's Gift Card from @stephsday http://bit.ly/1BXvzc 6 days ago
@GlutenFreeBklyn That's funny! I was thinking we need someone big to publicize. 6 days ago
 

Problems with Food Labeling

Posted May 07 2009 9:22pm

The article Review of thousands of food items leads companies to pull products from shelves discusses how the Chicago Tribune found mislabeled products at stores in the Chicago area. The Tribune reviewed labels and conducted laboratory tests, alerting manufacturers to problems. As a result, some manufacturers are recalling products or changing the labels. The article also offers five lessons for people trying to protect themselves or their children from foods which are hazardous to their health. Those lessons, which are elaborated on in the article, are:

  1. Label errors abound
  2. Technically, some labels confuse
  3. Oats are often tainted with wheat
  4. Beware of imports
  5. Skip unlabeled food

The article is a good reminder that despite food labeling laws, food is not always labeled as it should be. It's our responsibility to be diligent about reading labels, knowing terms, and using both caution and common sense.

Post a comment
Write a comment:

Related Searches