Healthy Living
20 Scariest Food Facts

20. Your food can legally contain maggots, rodent hair, and insect eggs. :
The FDA allows certain “defects” to slide by. Have a look at what your food can carry:
• Canned pineapple can pack in up to 20% moldy fruit.
• Berries can harbor up to 4 larvae per 100 grams.
• Oregano can legally contain up to 1,250 insect fragments per 10 grams.
• Cinnamon can carry up to 1 milligram of animal excrement per pound.
• Ocean perch can harbor small numbers of copepods, parasites that create pus pockets.

19. Nutritious food costs 10 times as much as junk food. :
University of Washington researchers calculated the cost
discrepancy between healthy food and junk foods and found that 2,000
calories of junk food rings up at a measly $3.52 a day. Yet for 2,000
calories of nutritious grub, the researchers plunked down $36. To add
insult to fiscal injury, out of every dollar you spend on food, only 19
cents goes toward the stuff you eat. The other 81 percent goes toward
marketing, manufacturing, and packaging. Think about that the next time
your grocery bill jumps into triple-digit dollars.

18.Grocers don’t have to tell you where your salad comes from.:
With fresh fruits and vegetables, supermarkets must tell
you the country of origin, but with dried fruit and mixed produce, the
law isn't so strict. That means a mixed bag of salads isn't required to
disclose its location, and that can create problems if there's a
bacterial outbreak. News reports might warn you about E. Coli-tainted
spinach coming from a certain country, but if your spinach is packaged
with other greens, you'll have no way of knowing if it's in your bag.
That's a huge problem considering leafy greens top the CDC's list of
foods most commonly associated with food borne illness.

17. Fruits and vegetables are losing their nutrients.:
According to the USDA, the fruits and vegetables we eat
today may contain significantly fewer nutrients than those our
grandparents ate. Researchers looked at 43 produce items and discovered
drops in protein (6 percent), calcium (16 percent), iron (15 percent),
riboflavin (38 percent), and vitamin C (20 percent). Your move: Eat
more fruits and vegetables.

16.Calorie counts on nutrition fact labels aren’t accurate.:
Researchers at Tufts University recently analyzed 269 food
items from 42 national sit-down and fast-food restaurant chains, and
they found that nearly 20 percent of samples contained 100 or more
calories than reported by the restaurants. Think about it like this: If
every meal you eat has 100 more calories than you need, you’ll gain
more than 30 pounds this year.

15. Chicken today contains 266 percent more fat than it did 40 years ago. :
What’s more, today’s chicken also has 33 percent less
protein, according to a study from the Institute of Brain Chemistry and
Human Nutrition at London Metropolitan University. The problem is
modern farming practices. Cramped environments and unnatural diets
produce birds that have the same weight problems as the humans who eat
them.

14. Milk contains hormones that may cause cancer.:
In 1970, a typical dairy cow could produce about 10,000
pounds of milk per year. Today, that same cow produces roughly 20,000
pounds. So did cows change? Nope. It’s their feed that’s different.
Today’s cows are routinely fed a hormone called recombinant bovine
somatotropin, or rBST. Problem is, studies have linked rBST to a
multitude of cancers, including those of the prostate, breast, and
colon. And while milk from rBST-treated cows is ubiquitous in America’s
supermarkets, some of the biggest players are getting wise. Stores
like Whole Foods, Wal-Mart, and Kroger only carry rBST-free dairy.

13. Conventional supermarket peaches can be coated with as many as nine different pesticides. :
Because peaches are prone to bruising, blemishing, and
insect takeover, they’re routinely soaked in chemicals in the weeks
before being shipped off to the supermarket. That’s why the
Environmental Working Group rates peaches among the dirtiest
conventional fruits in America. Also on that list: apples, celery,
strawberries, and spinach. As a general rule, unless the produce has a
thick, impermeable skin, assume it’s soaked in pesticides. Now wash it
with water and mild soap before you eat it.

12. You’re probably eating trans fat without knowing it.:
Slack FDA regulations allow food processors to claim zero
trans fats even if the food contains .49 grams. To be clear, that’s .49
grams per serving. That means by the time you finish, say, an entire
bag of Cheetos, you might be ingesting nearly 5 grams of trans fat.
Sure the bag says “0 GRAMS TRANS FAT” right on the front, but if you
look at the ingredient statement, you’ll see partially hydrogenated
oil, the primary source of trans fat.

11. The number of daily calories available to each American has increased by 500 over the last 40 years. :
USDA data shows that the food industry supplies 2,700
calories to every man, woman and child in America. In 1970, that number
was 2,200. That increase translates into 52 extra pounds of fat per
person, per year.

10. Commonly used food dyes can alter your kids’ behavior.:
Researchers at the University of Southampton found that
colors such as Yellow #5, Yellow #6, and Red #40 could cause
hyperactivity in children. Ironically, foods marketed to children are
often the most heavily dyed foods in the supermarket.

9. Your stomach bug is likely food poisoning.:
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates
that every year, 48,000 Americans receives food poisoning from
contaminated food, and that puts a $152 billion strain on the economy.
What’s worse, an astonishing 3,000 of those people die. Where’s the
problem? Click ahead to find out.

8. Forty-two percent of raw supermarket chicken is contaminated.:
In a study by Consumers Union, the driving force behind
Consumer Reports, 12 percent of tested chickens were infected with
Salmonella, and nearly half carried Campylobacter. Campylobacteriosis is
one of the most common causes of food poisoning in America.

7. Gulf Coast oysters carry E. coli.:
When researchers from Arizona tested Gulf Shore oysters,
they found E. coli in every single sample. As filter-feeders, oysters
naturally sift through the pollutants in the water, increasing their
risk of contamination by pathogens. If you’re buying oysters from
anything less than a highly trusted source, make sure you cook them
through.

6. The USDA is allowing your meat to be “cleaned” with ammonia—and they’re hiding it from you. :
The typical fast-food burger is made with slaughterhouse
trimmings, fatty cuts of beef typically reserved for pet food and
cooking oil. What’s more, these burgers contain pieces of hundreds,
potentially even thousands, of different cows. This creates an
environment where bacteria thrive, so to clean the meat, the USDA allows
a company called Beef Products to pipe the raw beef through pipes and
expose it to ammonia gas. Never mind that ammonia is a poison or that
evidence suggests the process may not be fully effective. The USDA deems
it safe enough, and it allows the meat to be sold without any
indication that it received the gas treatment.

5. Aluminum cans are lined with a hormone-disrupting toxin.:
Bisphenol A, or BPA, is the chemical found in plastic
bottles, glass jar lids, and the lining of food-containing tins and
cans. In your body, BPA acts similar to estrogen, and it has been linked
to behavioral problems, reproductive issues, and obesity. The industry
has been slow to find a replacement, so limit exposure by switching to
glass containers or plastic bottles labeled BPA-free.

4. Roughly two-thirds of bottled water doesn’t comply with FDA standards. :
When the Food and Drug Administration set bottled-water
regulations, it left in one gaping loophole: The regulations apply only
to bottled waters sold across state or country borders. Bottles packaged
and sold within a single state don’t have to comply with national
standards. Although many states do have their own set of (nationally
unregulated and unrecognized) regulations in place, one in five have
none. Furthermore, government and industry estimates figure that 25
percent of water bottles sold in the US contain mere tap water. You
should be so lucky as to end up with one of those; the FDA’s rules are
far more lax than the tap water standards set by the EPA.

3. We drink twice as many calories today as we did 30 years ago.:
The average American drinks 450 liquid calories every day,
according to a study from the University of North Carolina. And booze
isn’t the problem. Blame the bigger bottles of soda, the sugar-loaded
coffee drinks, and the barrel-sized smoothies.

2. Fast food signs alter your behavior:
A study published last year in Psychological Science
reveals that the mere sight of a fast-food sign on the side of the road
is enough to make people feel rushed, which can lead to impulsive
decisions—and dangerous nutritional choices. Sidestep your impulses the
next time you eat out: Plan your order before you walk through the door
and then stick with it.
1.There are crushed bugs in your food. :
Carmine, a vibrant red food colorant, is actually the
crushed abdomen of the female Dactylopius coccus, a beetle-like African
insect. Not only is the thought of eating bug juice gross, but it also
poses an ethical issue for some vegetarians and vegans. Look for it in
red-colored candies and juices.
Thanks for reading!
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