Guest guest Posted August 14, 2009 Report Share Posted August 14, 2009 Hi all, can you believe it - fat free milk and fat free half and half have corn syrup in it? I bought the other day a bottle of milk which read: " Fat free milk " from a company called " Active Lifestyle " . " Vitamin A and D added with plant sterols. Helps reduce cholesterol. " The bottle had a green cap and mostly green label. I didn't read the label at the store, just grabbed the bottle and only when home looked closer.So, here it is: " Active Lifestyle, fat free milk, vitamin A and D added. Ingredients: nonfat milk, plant sterol blend ( plant sterols, corn syrup solids, polyclycerol esters of fatty acids, gum acacia, vitamin A palmitate, vitamin D3. Distributed by: Inter-American Products, Cincinnati, OH45202 . What the heck are plant sterols and all that other stuff? Next day I started to read milk labels and discovered that fat free half and half also has corn syrup in it. ALWAYS beware when something says fat free, that might be the tip off. Better look at labels on even the most unusual items which you'd never imagine to have corn syrup and who knows what else in it. Lots of dog food has corn syrup in it, btw.It look as if just about everything has corn syrup in it. READ your labels. Also most of the brands of sour cream have corn starch or guar gum or gelatine in it. Even those claiming to be organic. Many others you can even tell they have corn starch in them as they have a gritty feel to them. I noticed it first with Shamrock sour cream which was awful. The only pure sour cream I found in my grocery store was the Daisy brand. So, I checked all the yogurts, and never bought anything but Daisy products, thinking I was okay. Never imagined milk having corn syrup in it. This is disgusting. What a crock our food industry is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2009 Report Share Posted August 15, 2009 There is a generic message here: don't MESS with the food! If Nature makes it with 3 or 4% fat, drink 4% fat and use less of it if you worry about fat. I have become a big fan of Sally Fallon's work. Her cookbook " Nourishing Traditons " contains many quotes from the work of Dr. Weston A. Price. She distinguishes between " new-fangled foods " and traditional food. Milk that has been tampered with, even with the best of intentions, clearly falls in the category of new-fangled food. For lots of free information in this spirit visit http://westonaprice.org Ien in the Kootenays, getting more old-fashioned by the day http://freegreenliving (blog) http://wildhealing.net (online superfoods store) http://wildwholefoods.net (my old friend AFA algae) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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