Most health conscious consumers
consider healthy foods to be things like raw fruits and vegetables, whole
grains, raw nuts and seeds, and clean meats like wild Alaskan salmon, or
free-range chicken or turkey.
Some ingredients that health
conscious consumers consider unacceptable are MSG (or free glutamate, or free
glutamic acid, including anything hydrolyzed or autolyzed), trans fats (hydrogenated
or partially hydrogenated oils [3]), artificial colors, artificial flavors, and
most preservatives.
Many so-called healthy fast food
menu items, upon closer inspection, do not live up to the health hype. Most of
the meat from any of the major chains has anything but a simple ingredients
list. They add emulsifiers, preservatives, MSG, artificial colors, trans fats,
and hidden ingredients under generic labels such as spices, or natural and
artificial flavors.
Some of these food additives are not
foods at all, but are chemicals that are generally recognized as safe. Most of
these additives cannot be found at your local grocery store, probably because
they aren't food. But some can be found at your local hardware store, though in
inedible products like low tox antifreeze, silicone caulk, soap, sunscreen, and
play sand.
The ingredient information in this
article came straight from the various fast food restaurants' web sites.
McDonald's
The egg's reputation is recovering,
but scrambled eggs as a part of McDonald's breakfast include much more than
egg. Their pasteurized whole eggs have sodium acid pyrophosphate, citric acid,
and monosodium phosphate (all added to preserve color), and nisin, a
preservative. To top it off, the eggs are prepared with liquid margarine:
liquid soybean oil, water, partially hydrogenated cottonseed and soybean oils
(trans fats), salt, hydrogenated cottonseed oil (trans fat), soy lecithin,
mono- and diglycerides, sodium benzoate, potassium sorbate (preservatives),
artificial flavor, citric acid, vitamin A palmitate, and beta carotene (color).
Though not all bad, these added chemicals may be the reason why homemade
scrambled eggs taste so much better than McDonald's.
For coffee drinkers, it would seem
fairly safe to just grab a quick cup of coffee at McDonalds on the way to work.
But many health conscious people would object to it also including this list of
ingredients: sodium phosphate, sodium polyphosphate, Di-Acetyl Tartrate Ester
of Monoglyceride, sodium stearoyl lactylate, tetra sodium pyrophosphate, sodium
hexametaphosphate, sodium citrate, and carrageenan. Do health nuts still drink
coffee?
Salads can usually be counted on to
be a "what you see is what you get" item. But McDonald's adds some
interesting ingredients. The salads with grilled chicken also have liquid
margarine.
Several salads have either cilantro
lime glaze, or orange glaze added. Along with many of McDonald's sauces, both
the cilantro lime glaze and the orange glaze contain propylene glycol alginate.
While propylene glycol is considered "GRAS" for human consumption, it
is not legal for use in cat food because the safety hasn't been proven yet
[10]. Proplene glycol is also used "As the killing and preserving agent in
pitfall traps, usually used to capture ground beetles" [10].
The chili lime tortilla strips that
are included in the southwest salads have several ingredients used to hide MSG.
They also contain two ingredients that advertise the presence of MSG: disodium
inosinate, and disodium guanylate.
The chicken has sodium phosphates
(of an unspecified variety). It could be trisodium phosphate (a cleanser),
monosodium phosphate (a laxative), or disodium hydrogen phosphate [11]. Why
would McDonald's add sodium phosphates (a foaming agent), and dimethylpolysiloxane
added as an antifoaming agent in their crispy chicken breast filets? It isn't
dishwasher detergent.
Burger King
It's interesting to note that the BK
Veggie Burger has six ingredients commonly used to hide free glutamate (MSG):
calcium caseinate, hydrolyzed corn, yeast extract, soy protein isolate, spices,
and natural flavors. At the end of the ingredients list, it states This is NOT
a vegan product. The patty is cooked in the microwave. Was that a warning
statement?
Burger King has three salads to
choose from. The TENDERCRISP Garden Salad, the TENDERGRILL Garden Salad, and
the Side Garden Salad.
A salad may be a little boring
without a dressing like Ken's Fat Free Ranch Dressing which includes titanium
dioxide (an artificial color, or sunscreen, depending on use), preservatives,
and the ingredient seemingly mandatory in all ranch dressings: monosodium
glutamate.
Once again, as is typical with the
fast food industry, they took a simple thing like chicken, and added a long
list of ingredients.
TENDERGRILL® CHICKEN BREAST FILET
Chicken Breast with Rib Meat, Water, Seasoning (Maltodextrin, Salt, Sugar,
Autolyzed Yeast Extract, Garlic Powder, Spices, Natural Flavors, Onion Powder,
Modified Corn Starch, Chicken Fat, Chicken Powder, Chicken Broth, Disodium
Guanylate and Disodium Inosinate, Citric Acid, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean
Oil, Dehydrated Garlic, and Artificial Flavors.), Modified Corn Starch, Soybean
Oil, Salt, Sodium Phosphates. Glazed with: Water, Seasoning [Maltodextrin,
Salt, Sugar, Methylcellulose, Autolyzed Yeast Extract, Partially Hydrogenated
Sunflower Oil, Modified Potato Starch, Fructose, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean
Oil, Garlic Powder, Onion Powder, Dehydrated Garlic, Spices, Modified Corn
Starch, Xanthan Gum, Natural Flavors, Disodium Guanylate and Disodium
Inosinate, Chicken Fat, Carmel Color, Grill Flavor (from Partially Hydrogenated
Soybean and Cottonseed Oil), Chicken Powder, Chicken Broth, Turmeric, Smoke
Flavor, Annatto Extract, and Artificial Flavors], Soybean Oil. [12]
Taco Bell
Taco Bell's website didn't have much
emphasis on health. Under the nutrition guide, at the bottom was a link to Keep
it Balanced, a token nod to health. It had no serious information on how to
really eat healthy. They recommend foods like pizza and tacos (no surprise)
because they may include ingredients from several food groups at once.
Including several food groups does not necessarily mean it's a healthy food.
The seasoned beef, carne asada
steak, spicy shredded chicken, and even the rice all include autolyzed yeast
extract (hidden MSG). Disodium inosinate and disodium guanylate are flavor
enhancers used in synergy with MSG [7,8]. Therefore, menu items with disodium
inosinate and/or disodium guanylate also contain MSG. This includes the avocado
ranch dressing, southwest chicken, citrus salsa, creamy jalapeno sauce, creamy
lime sauce, lime seasoned red strips, pepper jack sauce, and seasoned rice.
According to Wikipedia,
dimethylpolysiloxane is optically clear, and is generally considered to be
inert, non-toxic, and non-flammable. It is used in silicone caulk, adhesives,
and as an anti-foaming agent [6]. Appetizingly enough, it's also included in
Taco Bell's rice.
Wendy's
At Wendy's, there are several
tempting salads. The mandarin chicken salad seems healthy at first glance. It
has diced chicken, mandarin oranges, almonds, crispy noodles, your choice of
dressings, and five different varieties of lettuce. Then reality takes a bite
when you check the ingredients list. The almonds are roasted and salted. The
crispy noodles are not whole grain. The mandarin orange segments are not
freshly peeled oranges; most likely canned. The diced chicken has added
autolyzed yeast extract (MSG), disodium inosinate, disodium guanylate, sodium
phosphates (soap?), salt, more salt, sugar, modified corn startch (sic)[1], and
the universal umbrella ingredient list: spices, natural flavors, and artificial
flavors.
In the ingredients lists for the
salad dressings, one surprise was titanium dioxide in the Low Fat Honey Mustard
Dressing and the Reduced Fat Creamy Ranch Dressing. It's a very versatile
chemical. It can be used to manufacture paint, sunscreen, semiconductors, and
food coloring [2].
Wendy's Southwest Taco Salad is a
salad with Wendy's chili. Once again, the chili has hidden MSG: autolyzed yeast
extract, spices, artificial flavors, natural flavorings, disodium inosinate and
disodium guanylate (MSG give-aways). It's puzzling to try to understand why
their chili would need to include an anti-caking agent such as silicon dioxide
(also known as sand, or glass powder).
See if you can spot the sunscreen,
MSG, and soap in this Wendy's ingredient:
Seasoned Tortilla Strips Whole Corn,
Vegetable Oil (contains one or more of the following: corn, soybean or sunflower
oil), Salt, Buttermilk Solids, Spices, Tomato, Sweet Cream, Dextrose, Onion,
Sugar, Cheddar Cheese (cultured milk, salt, enzymes), Corn Starch, Modified
Corn Starch, Maltodextrin, Nonfat Dry Milk, Garlic, Torula Yeast, Citric Acid,
Autolyzed Yeast, Natural and Artifical Flavor, Artificial Colors (including
extractives of paprika, turmeric and annatto, titanium dioxide, red 40, yellow
5, blue 1), Disodium Phosphate, Lactic Acid, Soy Lecithin. CONTAINS: MILK.
Apparently, taste really is all that
matters at Wendy's.
Subway
If a sandwich is advertised as
healthy, one would expect that the bread would be whole grain. Not so with
Subway's wheat bread. While it does have some whole wheat flour, it's the third
ingredient, listed just before high fructose corn syrup [4]. None of Subway's
breads are whole grain. Ammonium sulfate (a fertilizer) is also added.
Unfinished sandwiches may be composted. The bread also contains
azodicarbonamide. From Wikipedia,
Use of azodicarbonamide as a food
additive is banned in Australia. In the UK, the Health and Safety Executive has
identified azodicarbonamide as a respiratory sensitiser (a possible cause of
asthma) and determined that products should be labeled with May cause
sensitisation by inhalation [5].
Most of the meats at Subway contain
MSG and/or sodium nitrite.
KFC
The chicken, the gravy, and even the
rice all have monosodium glutamate added. Not surprisingly, the chicken in the
salads also has MSG. For a healthy menu item, the House Side Salad without
dressing has nothing more than iceberg lettuce, romaine lettuce, and tomatoes.
KFC claims 0g trans fat per serving
for all their fried chicken. But The Extra Crispy Chicken, Colonel's Crispy
Strips, HBBQ Wings, Boneless HBBQ Wings, Fiery Buffalo Wings, and more have partially
hydrogenated soybean oil listed in the ingredients. So if the trans fat content
is below 0.5g per serving, they can round down to zero and claim zero grams per
serving.
In Closing
The salad a la carte may be the only
healthy thing to eat at a fast food place. The side salads offered at the fast
food places are hardly a meal, and hardly what one would consider a real salad.
Regarding MSG, it is helpful to
remember this statement from Wikipedia when reading food labels. Under current
FDA regulations, when MSG is added to a food, it must be identified as
monosodium glutamate in the label's ingredient list. If however MSG is part of
a spice mix that is purchased by another company, the manufacturer does not
have to list the ingredients of that spice mix and may use the words flavorings
or spices. Even food that uses the no msg label may therefore have MSG that is
added from a spice mix from another company under current FDA regulations.[9]
As with most meat products in fast
food restaurants, consider any meat, including on salads, to include MSG,
chemical preservatives, and trans fats. Even seemingly simple items like rice
can have ingredients like anti-foaming agents.
References
[1]
http://www.wendys.com/food/Nutrition.jsp
[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_dioxide
[3]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans_fats
[4]
http://subway.com/subwayroot/MenuNutrition/Nutrition/frmUSIngredients.aspx
[5]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azodicarbonamide
[6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethylpolysiloxane
[7]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disodium_inosinate
[8]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disodium_guanylate
[9]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monosodium_glutamate
[10]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propylene_glycol
[11]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_phosphates
[12]
http://www.bk.com/#menu=3,-1,-1
About the author John Andrews is an electrical engineer currently living in
Utah. He earned his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering in 2001 at the
University of Utah. John has adopted a whole foods lifestyle rich in raw fruits
and vegetables. This lifestyle change has produced a noticeable improvement in
physical health, appearance, and mental clarity. He savors knowledge and is
eager to teach others how to be healthy.
from www.NewsTarget.com

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