Inside the food industry: the surprising truth about what you eat
Think you eat only healthy, unprocessed foods? Think again. Joanna
Blythman went undercover and discovered that even your fruit salad is not what
it seems
Photograph:
Franck Allais for the Guardian
On a bright, cold day in late November 2013, I found myself in
the dark, eerie, indoor expanses of Frankfurt’s Blade Runner-like Festhalle
Messe. I was there undercover, to attend an annual trade show called Food
Ingredients. This three-day exhibition hosts the world’s most important
gathering of ingredients suppliers, distributors and buyers. In 2011, when it
was held in Paris, more than 23,000 visitors attended from 154 countries,
collectively representing a buying power of €4bn (£2.97bn). Think of it as the
food manufacturers’ equivalent of an arms fair. It is not open to the public.
Anyone who tries to register has to show that they work in food manufacturing;
I used a fake ID.
While exhibitors at most food exhibitions are often keen for you
to taste their products, few standholders here had anything instantly edible to
offer. Those that did weren’t all that they seemed. Canapé-style cubes of white
cheese dusted with herbs and spices sat under a bistro-style blackboard that
nonchalantly read “Feta, with Glucono-Delta-Lactone” (a “cyclic ester of
gluconic acid” that prolongs shelf life).
A pastry chef in gleaming whites rounded off his live
demonstration by offering sample petits fours to the buyers who had gathered.
His dainty heart- and diamond-shaped cakes were dead ringers for those neat
layers of sponge, glossy fruit jelly, cream and chocolate you see in the windows
of upmarket patisseries, but were made entirely without eggs, butter or cream,
thanks to the substitution of potato protein isolate. This revolutionary
ingredient provides the “volume, texture, stability and mouthfeel” we look for
in cakes baked with traditional ingredients – and it just happens to be
cheaper.
This is the goal of the wares on show, something the marketing
messages make clear. The strapline for a product called Butter Buds®, described
by its makers as “an enzyme-modified encapsulated butter flavour that has as
much as 400 times the flavour intensity of butter”, sums it up in six words:
“When technology meets nature, you save.”
Exhibitors’ stands were arranged like art installations.
Gleaming glass shelves were back-lit to show off a rainbow of super-sized
phials of liquids so bright with colouring, they might be neon. Plates of
various powders, shaped into pyramids, were stacked on elegant Perspex stands
bearing enigmatic labels – “texturised soy protein: minced ham colour,” read
one.
While I
never knowingly eat food with ingredients I don’t recognise, I'd probably
consumed many ‘wonder products'
Manufacturers who need their tomato sauce to be thick enough not
to leak out of its plastic carton – and just a little bit glossy, so that it doesn’t
look matt and old after several days in the fridge – were sold the advantages
of Microlys®, a “cost-effective” speciality starch that gives “shiny, smooth
surface and high viscosity”, or Pulpiz™, Tate & Lyle’s tomato “pulp
extender”. Based on modified starch, it gives the same pulpy visual appeal as
an all-tomato sauce, while using 25% less tomato paste.
The broad business portfolio of the companies exhibiting at Food
Ingredients was disconcerting. Omya, based in Hamburg, described itself as “a
leading global chemical distributor and producer of industrial minerals”,
supplying markets in food, pet food, oleochemicals, cosmetics, detergents,
cleaners, papers, adhesives, construction, plastics and industrial chemicals.
At Frankfurt, Omya was selling granular onion powder, monosodium glutamate and
phosphoric acid. For big companies such as this, food processing is just
another revenue stream. They experience no cognitive dissonance in providing
components not only for your meal, but also for your fly spray,
scratch-resistant car coating, paint or glue. The conference was the domain of
people whose natural environment is the laboratory and the factory, not the
kitchen, the farm or the field; people who share the assumption that everything
nature can do, man can do so much better, and more profitably.
Tired after hours of walking round the fair, and,
uncharacteristically, not feeling hungry, I sought refuge at a stand displaying
cut-up fruits and vegetables; it felt good to see something natural, something
instantly recognisable as food. But why did the fruit have dates, several weeks
past, beside them? A salesman for Agricoat told me that they had been dipped in
one of its solutions, NatureSeal, which, because it contains citric acid along
with other unnamed ingredients, adds 21 days to their shelf life. Treated in
this way, carrots don’t develop that telltale white that makes them look old,
cut apples don’t turn brown, pears don’t become translucent, melons don’t ooze
and kiwis don’t collapse into a jellied mush; a dip in NatureSeal leaves salads
“appearing fresh and natural”.
For the salesman, this preparation was a technical triumph, a
boon to caterers who would otherwise waste unsold food. There was a further
benefit: NatureSeal is classed as a processing aid, not an ingredient, so
there’s no need to declare it on the label, no obligation to tell consumers
that their “fresh” fruit salad is weeks old.
Somehow, I couldn’t share the salesman’s enthusiasm. Had I eaten
“fresh” fruit salads treated in this way? Maybe I had bought a tub on a station
platform or at a hotel buffet breakfast? It dawned on me that, while I never
knowingly eat food with ingredients I don’t recognise, I had probably consumed
many of the “wonder products” on show here. Over recent years, they have been
introduced slowly and artfully into foods that many of us eat every day – in
canteens, cafeterias, pubs, hotels, restaurants and takeaways.
Food
engineers can now create a ‘natural’ mature cheese flavouring within 72 hours.Photograph:
Franck Allais for the Guardian
You might find it all too easy to resist the lure of a turkey
drummer, a ready meal, a “fruit” drink or a pappy loaf of standard white bread.
You might check labels for E numbers and strange-sounding ingredients,
boycotting the most obvious forms of processed food. And yet you will still
find it hard to avoid the 6,000 food additives – flavourings, glazing agents,
improvers, bleaching agents and more – that are routinely employed behind the
scenes of contemporary food manufacture. That upmarket cured ham and salami,
that “artisan” sourdough loaf, that “traditional” extra-mature cheddar, those
luxurious Belgian chocolates, those speciality coffees and miraculous probiotic
drinks, those apparently inoffensive bottles of cooking oil: many have had a
more intimate relationship with food manufacturing than we appreciate.
When you try to dig deeper, you hit a wall of secrecy. For at
least the past decade, the big manufacturing companies have kept a low profile,
hiding behind the creed of commercial confidentiality, claiming they can’t
reveal their recipes because of competition. Instead, they leave it to
retailers to field any searching questions from journalists or consumers. In
turn, retailers drown you in superfluous, mainly irrelevant material. The most
persistent inquirers may be treated to an off-the-peg customer reply from
corporate HQ, a bland, non-specific reassurance such as, “Every ingredient in
this product conforms to quality assurance standards, EU regulations,
additional protocols based on the tightest international requirements, and our
own demanding specification standards.”
My
growing preoccupation was how little we know about the food that sits on our
supermarket shelves, in boxes, cartons
I spent years knocking on closed doors, and became frustrated by
how little I knew about contemporary food production. What happens on the farm
and out in the fields is passably well-policed and transparent. Abattoirs
undergo regular inspections, including from the occasional undercover reporter
from a vigilante animal welfare group, armed with a video camera. My growing
preoccupation was instead just how little we really know about the food that
sits on our supermarket shelves, in boxes, cartons and bottles – food that has
had something done to it to make it more convenient and ready to eat.
Eventually, contacts within the industry provided me with a
cover that allowed me to gain unprecedented access to manufacturing facilities,
as well as to subscriber-only areas of company sites, private spaces where the
chemical industry tells manufacturers how our food can be engineered. Even with
25 years of food chain investigations under my belt, it was an eye-opener.
Anything that comes in a box, tin, bag, carton or bottle has to
bear a label listing its contents, and many of us have become experts at
reading these labels. But many of the additives and ingredients that once
jumped out as fake and unfathomable have quietly disappeared. Does this mean
that their contents have improved? In some cases, yes, but there is an
alternative explanation. Over the past few years, the food industry has
embarked on an operation it dubs “clean label”, with the goal of removing the most
glaring industrial ingredients and additives, replacing them with substitutes
that sound altogether more benign. Some companies have reformulated their
products in a genuine, wholehearted way, replacing ingredients with substitutes
that are less problematic. Others, unconvinced that they can pass the cost on
to retailers and consumers, have turned to a novel range of cheaper substances
that allow them to present a scrubbed and rosy face to the public.
Imagine you are standing in the supermarket. Maybe you usually
buy some cured meat for an antipasti. Picking up a salami, even the most
guarded shopper might relax when they see rosemary extract on the
ingredients list – but rosemary extracts are actually “clean-label” substitutes
for the old guard of techie-sounding antioxidants (E300-21), such as
butylhydroxyanisole (BHA) and butylhydroxytoluene (BHT). Food manufacturers use
them to slow down the rate at which foods go rancid, so extending their shelf
life.
Rosemary extracts don’t always have to carry an E number (E392),
but the more poetic addition of “extract of rosemary” makes it sound like a
lovingly made ingredient – especially if that salami is also labelled as
natural or organic. And the extract does have something to do with the herb,
usually in its dried form. The herb’s antioxidant chemicals are isolated in an
extraction procedure that “deodorises” them, removing any rosemary taste and
smell. Extraction is done by using either carbon dioxide or chemical solvents –
hexane (derived from the fractional distillation of petroleum), ethanol and
acetone. Neutral-tasting rosemary extract is then sold to manufacturers,
usually in the form of a brownish powder. Its connection with the freshly cut,
green and pungent herb we know and love is fairly remote.
Not sure what to have for dinner? How about a chicken noodle
dish? If you noticed that it contained an amino acid such as L-cysteine E910,
your enthusiasm might wane, especially if you happen to know that this additive
can be derived from animal and human hair. But a range of new-wave yeast
extracts is increasingly replacing E910. One supplier markets its wares as “a
variety of pre-composed, ready-to-use products that provide the same intensity as
our classical process flavours but are labelled as all-natural. Ingredients are
available in chicken and beef flavour, with roasted or boiled varieties, as
well as white meat and dark roast.” All can be labelled as “yeast extract” – a
boon for manufacturers, because yeast extracts have a healthy image as a rich
source of B vitamins. Less well known is the fact that yeast extract has a high
concentration of the amino acid glutamate, from which monosodium glutamate –
better known as MSG, one of the most shunned additives – is derived.
What else is in your basket? Suppose you are eyeing up a pot of
something temptingly called a “chocolate cream dessert”. You read the
ingredients: whole milk, sugar (well, there had to be some), cream, cocoa
powder and dark chocolate. It all sounds quite upmarket, but then your urge to
buy falters as you notice three feel-bad ingredients.
This is
the domain of people whose natural environment is the laboratory, not the
kitchen; people who share the assumption that everything nature can do, man can
do so much better and more profitably. Photograph:
Franck Allais for the Guardian
The first is carrageenan (E407), a setting agent derived from
seaweed that has been linked with ulcers and gastrointestinal cancer. It is now
regarded in food industry circles as an “ideally not” (to be included)
additive. The second of these worrying ingredients is a modified starch
(E1422), or to give it its full chemical name, acetylated distarch adipate. It
started off as a simple starch, but has been chemically altered to increase its
water-holding capacity and tolerance for the extreme temperatures and physical
pressures of industrial-scale processing. The third problematic ingredient is
gelatine. This is anathema to observant Muslims, Jews and vegetarians, and even
secular omnivores may be wondering what this by-product of pig skin is doing in
their pudding.
Fortunately for the manufacturers of your chocolate cream
dessert, there is a Plan B. They can remove all three offending items, and
replace them with a more sophisticated type of “functional flour”,
hydrothermally extracted from cereals, that will do the same job, but without
the need for E numbers.
Another possibility for cleaning up this dessert would be to use
a “co-texturiser”, something that would cost-effectively deliver the necessary
thick and creamy indulgence factor. Texturisers, just like modified starches,
are based on highly processed, altered starch designed to withstand
high-pressure manufacturing – but because they are obligingly classified by
food regulators as a “functional native starch”, they can be labelled simply as
“starch”. Again, no E numbers. So, out come two additives and one ingredient
that many people avoid, to be replaced by a single new-generation ingredient,
one that is opaque in its formulation (proprietary secrets and all that) but
which won’t trigger consumer alarm.
The history of food processing is littered with ingredients that
were initially presented as safer and more desirable, yet subsequently outed as
the opposite. Hydrogenated vegetable oils, or margarine, were actively promoted
as healthier than the natural saturated fats in butter. High fructose corn
syrup, once marketed as preferable to sugar, has now been identified as a key
driver of the obesity epidemic in the US.
Is the clean-label campaign a heart-and-soul effort by
manufacturers to respond to our desire for more wholesome food? Or just a
self-interested substitution exercise? The lines are deliberately blurred: as
one executive in a leading supply company put it, “Ingredients that give the
impression that they originated in a grandmother’s kitchen and have not been
processed too harshly are of great appeal to consumers.” Meanwhile, there is no
evidence that manufacturers are using greater quantities of the real, natural
ingredients consumers want. Clean labelling looks less like a thorough spring
clean of factory food than a superficial tidy-up, with the most embarrassing
mess stuffed in the cupboard behind a firmly shut door – where, hopefully, no
one will notice.
From water-injected poultry and powdered coagulated egg, to
ultra-adhesive batters and pre-mixed marinades, the raw materials in industrial
food manufacturing are rarely straightforward. In fact, they commonly share
quite complicated back stories of processing and intervention that their labels
don’t reveal.
In the same way that you will never see a stray onion skin lying
around a ready-meals factory, you’re extremely unlikely to see an eggshell,
either. Eggs are supplied to food manufacturers in powders, with added sugar,
for instance, or as albumen-only special “high gel” products for whipping.
Liquid eggs will be pasteurised, yolk only, whites only, frozen or chilled, or
with “extended shelf life” (one month) – whichever is easiest. They may be
liquid, concentrated, dried, crystallised, frozen, quick frozen or coagulated.
Manufacturers can also buy in handy pre-cooked, ready-shelled eggs for
manufacturing products such as Scotch eggs and egg mayonnaise, or eggs
pre-formed into 300g cylinders or tubes, so that each egg slice is identical
and there are no rounded ends.
These hard-boiled, tubular eggs are snapped up by
sandwich-making companies. Manufacturers can also take their pick from bespoke
egg mixes, which are ready to use in everything from quiches and croissants to
glossy golden pastry glazes and voluminous meringues. And there is always the
cheaper option of using “egg replacers” made from fractionated whey proteins
(from milk). No hurry to use them up: they have a shelf life of 18 months.
The
food industry has embarked on ‘operation clean label’ – removing the most
glaring industrial ingredients and replacing them with substitutes that sound
natural and benign.Photograph: Franck Allais
Food engineers can now create a “natural” mature cheese
flavouring by blending young, immature cheese with enzymes (lipases or
proteases) that intensify the cheese flavour until it reaches “maturity” –
within 24 to 72 hours. This mature cheese flavouring is then heat-treated to
halt enzymatic activity. Hey, presto: mature-tasting cheese in days rather than
months. (Traditional cheddar is not considered truly mature until it has spent
between nine and 24 months in the maturing room.)
A factory pantry looks nothing like yours. When the home cook
decides to make a Bakewell tart, she or he puts together a lineup of familiar
ingredients: raspberry jam, flour, butter, whole eggs, almonds, butter and
sugar. The factory food technologist, on the other hand, approaches the tart
from a totally different angle: what alternative ingredients can we use to
create a Bakewell tart-style product, while replacing or reducing expensive
ingredients – those costly nuts, butter and berries? How can we cut the amount
of butter, yet boost that buttery flavour, while disguising the addition of
cheaper fats? What sweeteners can we add to lower the tart’s blatant sugar
content and justify a “reduced calorie” label? How many times can we reuse the
pastry left over from each production run in subsequent ones? What antioxidants
could we throw into the mix to prolong the tart’s shelf life? Which enzyme
would keep the almond sponge layer moist for longer? Might we use a long-life
raspberry purée and gel mixture instead of conventional jam? What about coating
the almond sponge layer with an invisible edible film that would keep the
almonds crunchy for weeks? Could we substitute some starch for a proportion of
the flour to give a more voluminously risen result? And so on.
We all
eat prepared foods made using state-of-the-art technology. And we don’t know
what this diet might be doing to us
We all eat prepared foods made using state-of-the-art
technology, mostly unwittingly, either because the ingredients don’t have to be
listed on the label, or because weasel words such as “flour” and “protein”,
peppered with liberal use of the adjective “natural”, disguise their production
method. And we don’t know what this novel diet might be doing to us.
A disturbing 60% of the UK population is overweight; a quarter
of us are obese. Are we leaping to an unjustified conclusion when we lay a
significant part of the blame for obesity, chronic disease and the dramatic
rise in reported food allergies at the door of processed food? There are
several grounds for examining this connection.
Food manufacturers combine ingredients that do not occur in
natural food, notably the trilogy of sugar, processed fat and salt, in their
most quickly digested, highly refined, nutrient-depleted forms. The official
line – that the chemicals involved pose no risk to human health when ingested
in small quantities – is scarcely reassuring. Safe limits for consumption of
these agents are based on statistical assumptions, often provided by companies
who make the additives.
Manufactured foods often contain chemicals with known toxic
properties – although, again, we are reassured that, at low levels, this is not
a cause for concern. This comforting conclusion is the foundation of modern
toxicology, and is drawn from the 16th-century Swiss physician, Paracelsus,
whose theory “the dose makes the poison” (ie, a small amount of a poison does
you no harm) is still the dogma of contemporary chemical testing. But when
Paracelsus sat down to eat, his diet wasn’t composed of takeaways and
supermarket reheats; he didn’t quench his thirst with canned soft drinks. Nor
was he exposed to synthetic chemicals as we are now, in traffic fumes, in
pesticides, in furnishings and much more. Real world levels of exposure to
toxic chemicals are not what they were during the Renaissance. The processed
food industry has an ignoble history of actively defending its use of
controversial ingredients long after well-documented, subsequently validated,
suspicions have been aired.
The precautionary principle doesn’t seem to figure prominently
in the industry’s calculations, nor – such is their lobbying power – does it
loom large in the deliberations of food regulators. If it did, then steering
clear of manufactured products would be a lot easier.
The pace of food engineering innovation means that more complex
creations with ever more opaque modes of production are streaming on to the
market every day. Just last month, a dossier for a new line of dairy proteins
dropped into my mailbox. Alongside a photo of a rustic-looking, golden pan
loaf, the explanation read: “Many bakers are now turning to permeates, a rather
new ingredient in the food ingredients market. Permeate is a co-product of the
production of whey protein concentrate (WPC), whey protein isolate (WPI),
ultrafiltered milk, milk protein concentrate (MPC), or milk protein isolate
(MPI).”
Permeate, apparently, “contributes to the browning of baked
goods” and produces bread that “retains its softness for a longer period of
time and extends shelf life”. How clever. But I would prefer that my bread was
browned solely from the application of heat. I’m prepared to accept that it
will stale over time, rather than eat something that owes its existence to
ingredients and technologies to which I am not privy, cannot interrogate and so
can never truly understand. Am I about to hand over all control of bread, or
anything else I eat, to the chemical industry’s food engineers? Not without a
fight.
What your food label
really means
Added vitamins One-dimensional
factory versions of natural vitamins found in whole foods: ascorbic acid
(man-made vitamin C) is usually synthesised from the fermentation of GM corn,
while artificial vitamin E is commonly derived from petrol.
Soluble fibre A healthier-sounding term for modified starch, which is widely used to reduce the quantity of more nutritious ingredients in processed foods, and keep down manufacturers’ costs.
‘Natural’ colourings The only difference between these and artificial ones is that they start with pigments that occur in nature. Otherwise, they are made using the same highly chemical industrial processes, including extraction using harsh solvents.
Artificial ‘diet” sweeteners Several large-scale studies have found a correlation between artificial sweetener consumption and weight gain. Accumulating evidence suggests that they may also increase our risk of Type 2 diabetes.
Enzymes Used to make bread stay soft longer; injected into low-value livestock before slaughter, to tenderise their meat; and used in fruit juice processing to create a cloudier, more natural appearance.
‘Packaged in a protective atmosphere’ Food that has been “gassed” in modified air to extend its shelf life. It delays what food manufacturers call “warmed over flavour”, an off-taste that occurs in factory food.
Beef/pork/poultry protein Collagen extracted from butchered carcasses, processed into a powder and added to low-grade meats. It adds bounce, increases the protein content on the nutrition label and, combined with water, is a substitute for meat.
Washed and ready-to-eat salads “Cleaned” by sloshing around in tap water dosed with chlorine, often with powdered or liquid fruit acids to inhibit bacterial growth. The same tank of treated water is often used for 8 hours at a time.
‘Pure’ vegetable oil Industrially refined, bleached, deodorised oils. Food processors often add chemicals to extend their “fry life”.
‘Natural’ flavourings Even the flavour industry concedes that “there isn’t much difference in the chemical compositions of natural and artificial flavourings”. They are made using the same physical, enzymatic, and microbiological processes.
Soluble fibre A healthier-sounding term for modified starch, which is widely used to reduce the quantity of more nutritious ingredients in processed foods, and keep down manufacturers’ costs.
‘Natural’ colourings The only difference between these and artificial ones is that they start with pigments that occur in nature. Otherwise, they are made using the same highly chemical industrial processes, including extraction using harsh solvents.
Artificial ‘diet” sweeteners Several large-scale studies have found a correlation between artificial sweetener consumption and weight gain. Accumulating evidence suggests that they may also increase our risk of Type 2 diabetes.
Enzymes Used to make bread stay soft longer; injected into low-value livestock before slaughter, to tenderise their meat; and used in fruit juice processing to create a cloudier, more natural appearance.
‘Packaged in a protective atmosphere’ Food that has been “gassed” in modified air to extend its shelf life. It delays what food manufacturers call “warmed over flavour”, an off-taste that occurs in factory food.
Beef/pork/poultry protein Collagen extracted from butchered carcasses, processed into a powder and added to low-grade meats. It adds bounce, increases the protein content on the nutrition label and, combined with water, is a substitute for meat.
Washed and ready-to-eat salads “Cleaned” by sloshing around in tap water dosed with chlorine, often with powdered or liquid fruit acids to inhibit bacterial growth. The same tank of treated water is often used for 8 hours at a time.
‘Pure’ vegetable oil Industrially refined, bleached, deodorised oils. Food processors often add chemicals to extend their “fry life”.
‘Natural’ flavourings Even the flavour industry concedes that “there isn’t much difference in the chemical compositions of natural and artificial flavourings”. They are made using the same physical, enzymatic, and microbiological processes.
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