Those darn chemicals: Difference between revisions

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=Some things worth talking about=
=Some things worth talking about=
===E numbers===
{{stub}}
===E numbers===
'''E numbers just means it's tested'''
E numbers are things commonly used as food additives that have been tested for such use
which makes it well quantified how to use them safely.
They get short codes in the process, which is an easier shorthand to refer to the substance
and the tests. This is often easier more precise and/or easier than a fancier pseudonym and/or more chemical name ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Nomenclature_of_Cosmetic_Ingredients#Table_of_common_names things like INCI] may help both ways (e.g. water is aqua) but at least tend to standardize the names used somewhat).
Such naming can also make regulation a lot easier to do, including the health testing.
While regulations apply regardless of what name you use,
it ''can'' make it somewhat easier for you to recognize what's in there.
Some negative fearful snap judgment got ''all'' E numbers associated with unnatural and bad for you,
because it's largely just "the set of things we tested", it mostly isn't.
A good number of them are in fact nutrition you absolutely need, or are perfectly healthy, and/or perfectly natural.
Consider:
: E300 though E309 are vitamin C and E,
: E101 is vitamin B2 (used as coloring),
: E160c is pepper extract, mostly used for coloring
: E160a is carrot, as used for coloring
: E170 is calcium (basically),
: E948 is oxygen
Sure, there are also a few handfuls (out of hundreds) that I don't see having a place in my food, if I have any choice.
And that was part of the point: the testing let us know we don't want it, the name lets us check more easily.
And a few that you'll probably never see - there's rarely any silver (E174) or gold (E175) in food
but they're included for testing purposes, just so that you may know how safe they are when they ''are'' used in, say, cake decoration.
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Half the E numbers are things like food coloring, preservatives, thickeners, regulators, anti-caking, flavouring.
The thing that settles the texture, look, and taste.
And chemically relatively boring. For a lot of those, it's more about moderation -- say, preservatives (E200 though E299) are useful in moderation against bacteria and mold, so good in context of eating stored foods, but not healthy in concentration.
And that's one thing E numbers help settle - E numbers means it has been studied how much of each is unhealthy, and often means there's some regulation or law about them.
But also things like antibiotics.
-->
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The ranges are ''roughly'':
: E1xx: food coloring (including natural ones)
: E2xx: preservatives
: E3xx: [[Antioxidants]], acidity regulators
: E4xx: thickeners, emulsifiers, stabilisers
: E5xx: Acidity regulators, anti-caking agents
: E6xx: flavour enhancers
: E7xx: antibiotics
: E9xx: glazing agents, gases, sweeteners
: E10xx~15xx: miscellaneous
-->
See also:
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_number
[[Category:Cooking]]


===Pesticides===
===Pesticides===
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===BPA===
===BPA===

Revision as of 14:48, 2 October 2023

This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.

BIG RED TEXT HELLO: This is not health advice, or necessarily correct. Do not make health decisions based on just this. Do your own research, and not just the stuff that agrees with your opinions.



But first

Everything is chemicals, and everything is toxic at high concentrations

Toxin, poison, venom

Some things worth talking about

E numbers

This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.

E numbers

E numbers just means it's tested

E numbers are things commonly used as food additives that have been tested for such use which makes it well quantified how to use them safely.


They get short codes in the process, which is an easier shorthand to refer to the substance and the tests. This is often easier more precise and/or easier than a fancier pseudonym and/or more chemical name (things like INCI may help both ways (e.g. water is aqua) but at least tend to standardize the names used somewhat).

Such naming can also make regulation a lot easier to do, including the health testing.

While regulations apply regardless of what name you use, it can make it somewhat easier for you to recognize what's in there.



Some negative fearful snap judgment got all E numbers associated with unnatural and bad for you, because it's largely just "the set of things we tested", it mostly isn't.


A good number of them are in fact nutrition you absolutely need, or are perfectly healthy, and/or perfectly natural.

Consider:

E300 though E309 are vitamin C and E,
E101 is vitamin B2 (used as coloring),
E160c is pepper extract, mostly used for coloring
E160a is carrot, as used for coloring
E170 is calcium (basically),
E948 is oxygen


Sure, there are also a few handfuls (out of hundreds) that I don't see having a place in my food, if I have any choice. And that was part of the point: the testing let us know we don't want it, the name lets us check more easily.


And a few that you'll probably never see - there's rarely any silver (E174) or gold (E175) in food but they're included for testing purposes, just so that you may know how safe they are when they are used in, say, cake decoration.



See also:


Pesticides

BPA

This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.


Phtalates

This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.

PFAS

PFOA

This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.



Parabens

Reading off ingredient lists