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Genetically Engineered Fish Proteins in Ice Cream? |
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Unilever, the British-Dutch global consumer marketing products giant,
is the largest producer of ice cream and frozen novelties in the U.S.
Unilever's brands sold in the U.S. include Breyer's ice cream,
Ben&Jerry's ice cream, Klondike ice cream bars and Popsicle
products.
Specifically,
Breyer's Light Double-Churned, Extra Creamy Creamy Chocolate ice cream,
as well as a Good Humor ice cream novelty bar, contain the
genetically-modified fish "antifreeze"proteins.
Unilever's
scientists have patented, and the company is using ice cream products
sold in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand, "antifreeze" protein
substances from the blood of the ocean pout (a polar ocean species).
That substance is produced through genetically modified (GM) yeast, in
large vat batches. Unilever's ice cream products that contain "ice
structuring protein" (ISP) contain the material at the level of .01% of
finished product volume.
Human "Safety" testing ?
Like
many other GM materials in our foods, The federal Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) looks like it has asleep at the switch. Long story
short on the human "safety" protocols submitted by Unilever to FDA:
human allergy resting was conducted on codfish blood proteins, not on
blood proteins on blood proteins from the ocean pout.
Codfish and the ocean pout do not even belong to the same sub-class, in the "Order of Species."
In
Great Britain, Unilever is seeking approval from the government food
safety agency for approval to use GM-Derrived fish "antifreeze"
proteins in ice cream products. Food safety watch-dog in Great Britain
are in an uproar over such proposals.
Unilever touts the
benefits of the fish "anti-freeze" protein as "crystallization" when
ice cream products warm (above proper temperatures) and then are
refrozen. In truth: the fish "ant-freeze" proteins look like one more
trick in the corporate bag of tricks to produce cheaper products . . .
without regard to serious safety human safety consideration.
See source here.
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