Soy Lecithin

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.
Jul 12, 2013
1,011
10
0
#1
National Organic Standards Board Votes on Soy Lecithin De-Listing

May 21st, 2009The National Organic Standards Board (NOSB), at its recent May meeting, had its first ever opportunity to remove a conventional food ingredient from the “National List.” The National List includes minor food ingredients of which manufacturers may use conventional versions if the organic version is commercially unavailable.

Soy lecithin, used in foods such as chocolate, infant formula and cooking spray, has been available in organic form since 2004, yet some certifying agents allow food manufacturers to use the conventional version (conventional lecithin is cheaper, made with conventionally grown soybeans and processed with the hazardous petrochemical solvent hexane).

If the organic industry is to evolve – to grow in integrity as well as volume – companies that develop organic versions of minor ingredients should be rewarded for their efforts with a change in the regulations that removes ingredients as allowed substances on the National List. And only by appropriately removing ingredients from the National List will all food manufacturers be forced to use organic versions.

Cornucopia has been pushing for removal of soy lecithin from the National List and mounted a letter writing campaign to the NOSB favoring removal (more than half of the 500 public comments received in advance of the meeting concerned lecithin, with the vast majority supporting removal).

The NOSB voted in favor of the petition to remove liquid soy lecithin from the National List. But they then decided against removing a second version, de-oiled (“dry”) lecithin. Dry lecithin is not yet available in organic form because nobody has found an alternative to the solvent acetone that’s used for de-oiling. While a partial victory for organic integrity, the NOSB clearly caved to pressure from big corporations that came to lobby for dry lecithin (used as a matter of convenience by food manufacturers as it’s easier to handle than liquid lecithin).

We urge you to check ingredient labels and avoid organic foods with non-organic soy lecithin. But we do not think it’s the consumer’s responsibility to check labels for non-organic ingredients in organic foods. Organic consumers should be able to trust the green “USDA certified organic” seal. The NOSB let us down when they decided to keep a hexane-extracted, acetone-extracted, conventional soy lecithin in organic foods for the convenience of food manufacturers. We will continue the fight for the integrity of the organic seal!


Prevent Disease.com - Soy Lecithin: How It Negatively Affects Your Health And Why You Need To Avoid It
 

lydever91

Senior Member
Aug 5, 2011
491
14
18
#2
Thank you for posting.

I always thought I was safe consuming products with the organic sticker on it. I did, however, find myself looking at the labels out of curiosity. I only saw soy lecithin once in coconut oil spray. I looked at the label that time to humor myself. Boy was I shocked at the results. I'll never test my humor again.

cocospray.JPG