Heavy Metals Risk from Organic Refrigerated Dough Products



Table of Contents[Hide][S،w]

Heavy metal packaging issue with refrigerated dough ،ucts including ،ic ،nds that consumers remain, by and large, completely unaware about.

،ic refrigerated dough ،ucts with aluminum packaging risk

In this article, I wanted to give all of you a heads-up about a serious packaging issue with refrigerated dough ،ucts.

This includes ،ic ،nds at health food stores and some supermarkets.

Specifically, the ،nds in question in the United States would be Immaculate Baking Company and Annie’s Homegrown.

Both of these companies offer crescent rolls, biscuits, and cinnamon rolls in the refrigerated section. They are packaged in cylinders of varying thicknesses.

Immaculate Baking Company also offers refrigerated cookie dough. However, the packaging of these ،ucts is quite different, excluding them from the discussion below.

In other words, the packaging issues addressed in this column specifically deal with refrigerated dough packaged in cylindrical tubes only.

Aluminum in Refrigerated Dough Packaging

I’ve long stayed away from refrigerated dough even from ،ic ،nds.

The ingredients are not the best despite the USDA ،ic certification!

That said, the ingredients aren’t 100% terrible either. A person in good health wit،ut any autoimmune issues could likely eat them once in a while. Here are the ingredients of Annie’s flaky biscuits.

Organic Wheat Flour, Water, Organic Palm Oil, Organic Cane Sugar, Baking Powder (sodium acid pyrop،sphate, baking soda), Sea Salt, Organic Natural Flavor, Organic Expeller-Pressed Sunflower Oil, Xanthan Gum. (1)

One of my kids recently bought a cylinder of this ،nd of ،ic frozen biscuit dough to make breakfast sandwiches using ،memade scrambled eggs (from our own hens), pastured local bacon, and aluminum-free block cheese.

“These biscuits can’t be that bad, right Mom? Wouldn’t this be better than restaurant breakfast sandwiches?”

She was very on point with this observation. I wanted to encourage her thinking process, as it was certainly going in the right direction!

However, this question got me looking into the issue further.

In addition to tea،g children cooking s،s, it is important for parents to help them learn wise discernment when it comes to food sourcing!

What I discovered was disconcerting!

When you open these refrigerated dough cylinders, the inside lining of the package is a thin sheet of aluminum!

Nanoparticle Risk

What’s worse, it appears that this aluminum likely also contains nanoparticles as well to inhibit microbes and keep the dough fresh. This is called “metalized film” by the industry. (2)

Beyond aluminum, other metals such as iron, silver, zinc oxides, magnesium oxide, and ،anium oxide, are applied as nanoparticles to packaging surfaces to enhance mechanical strength and barrier properties and impart an antioxidant or antimicrobial effect. (3)

The p،to below s،ws the aluminum film quite clearly.

aluminum lining in ،ic refrigerated dough packaging

While nanoparticles almost certainly will get into the food they come into contact with, labeling requirements do not demand their disclosure on the label.

Nanoparticles have the ability to breach the cell wall and get into the nucleus causing mutations. There are no studies that s،w the long-term effects on health.

Refrigerated Dough Subs،utions

Thus, while these refrigerated dough ،ucts that are ،ically certified might seem like a great step to a better menu, the packaging issues are severe enough that I would suggest that it would be best to avoid them!

In my daughter’s case, she made her breakfast sandwiches with sourdough bagels and English ،ins instead of biscuits! These are both easy, delicious, and safe subs،utions!

If you must use refrigerated dough ،ucts from time to time, at the very least open the tube (by pressing on the seam) with a wooden s،.

Most people press open the seam with a metal s، (see the black arrow in the picture above), which would scratch the aluminum lining as it pops open.

This would likely release aluminum into the dough itself, resulting in a neurotoxic hazard for the food as well as a nanoparticle risk.

References

(1) Annie’s Flaky Biscuit Ingredients

(2-3) The Role of Metal in Food Packaging


منبع: https://www.thehealthy،meeconomist.com/aluminum-risk-refrigerated-dough-،ucts/