What's Up With Soy ?


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Doesn't the goverment protect us ?

Soy 101 > Semister 2

Why Sure They Do !

Yes they put Soy in our meat !

Meat and Poultry Products


The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) has established guidelines for the application of soy proteins in meat and poultry products.

* Soy proteins are permitted alone, or in combination withother binders,
up to 8 percent in chili,
12 percent in meatballs and 12 percent in Salisbury steaks. The FSIS permits the use of flours, grits, concentrates, isolate and texturized forms at levels sufficient for formulating soups, stews, scrappie, tamales, meat pies, imitation sausage and non-specific loaves.

* Use of soy flour is allowed in
sausage products having astandard of identity, alone or in combination with permitted additives, not to exceed a total of 3.5 percent. Soy protein isolate is permitted at 2 percent and soy protein concentrate is permitted at 3.5 percent with appropriate labeling.

Yes that is 9 percent !


* For injected whole muscle
pork products, FSIS mandatesthat brine preparation must be formulated in such a way that the finished product meets a minimum of 17 percent protein content.

What percent of soy to achieve only 17% for pork?


* Meat items containing textured proteins must bear productlabels with an ingredient statement approved by the FSIS. Current regulations prefer that unflavored proteins be labeled Textured (Soy Flour), (Soy Protein Concentrate) or (Soy Protein Isolate). Fortified, colored, uncolored and flavored ingredients should be labeled Textured Vegetable Protein Product* (soy flour, concentrate or isolate, caramel color, salt, flavor, etc. ).

A ratio rule is in place and administered by the FSIS that requires the labeling, as part of the main panel product name, to be based on the
ratio of dry soy ingredient to uncooked meat. In the highest level of use (ratios exceeding one part dry soy ingredients to 10 parts uncooked meat) Thats 10%, the soy protein ingredient must be made part of the descriptive name as well as appear in the ingredient statement. At intermediate usage levels (ratios not to exceed one part dry soy ingredients to 10 parts uncooked meat)Thats 10%, the soy protein ingredient must be listed as a subtitle contiguous to the product name as well as in the ingredient statement. In the lowest levels of use (ratios not to exceed one part dry soy ingredients to 13 parts uncooked meat), the soy protein ingredient (commonly textured) must be listed in the ingredient statement only. If the prepared food provides less nutrition than the traditional meat product without an added soy protein ingredient, then other labeling requirements may be imposed. When the soy ingredients do form part of the revised products' name, formulated, standard of identity foods generally still require the maintenance of traditional meat levels.

The National School Lunch Program allows vegetable proteins in combination with meat, poultry or fish as a meat
alternate to achieve part of the minimum requirement of 2 ounces (edible portion as served) of cooked meat. The proportion of hydrated vegetable protein products* (hydrated to 18 percent protein, fortitled with vitamins and minerals and manufactured according to USDA specifications), may not exceed a ratio of 30 parts fully hydrated vegetable protein product to 70 parts uncooked meat,Thats 30% fish or poultry. The only exception relates to Nutrient Standard Menu Planning where the food product consists of 100 parts hydrated vegetable protein products* and no uncooked meat products. The soy protein ingredient that meets the fortification specifications of the USDA School Lunch regulations must include the added nutrients in the ingredient listing on the label.

*The USDA refers to soy protein as vegetable protein product.

Bakery Products and Pasta


FDA Standards of Identity for enriched bread allow the use of up to
3 percent nonfat milk solids or soy flour (Cheeper then milk) as optional ingredients. There is no limitation in non-standardized breads. FDA Standards of Identity permit 0.5 percent enzyme-active soy flour in bread dough to increase mixing tolerance and to strengthen gluten proteins.

FDA Standards of Identity for pasta products permit fortification with soy protein. When soy flour is added to
fortified macaroni, U.S. regulations require an inclusion of 12.5 percent minimum.

Dairy Products and Margarine/Edible Spreads


Soy flour is part of the FDA Standards of Identity for margarine and
it can be used in all types of edible spreads (e.g., replacement in peanut spreads and candy fillings). Current U.S. federal and state dairy laws greatly restrict competition by modified or imitation dairy products and retard new developments in this area.

What Peanut butter has no soy, there are still some, but buy quick !


Would you like to try and find what margarine on the shelf has no soy ?

Let us know if you find any!


Formulated Foods


No FDA Standards of Identity prohibit the use of soy protein ingredients in the development of a wide variety of nonmeat/poultry foods, including
ready-to-eat cereals, side dishes, soups, cooking sauces and condiments, "add meat" meal entrees, cookies, snacks, non-standard breads and other bakery products. In these particular cases, ingredient labeling regulations apply universally. This is also the case on the descriptive main panel labeling if the soy ingredient "characterizes" the food. Nutritional and health benefits associated with soy protein products can be highlighted in this area.

DO YOU REMEMBER WHEN FOOD TASTED BETTER THEN IT DOES NOW ?


The statements on this website have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. We would certainly not say Soy is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease, it is more likely to harm. But, the information presented on this web site is not intended to take the place of your personal physician's advice. Discuss this information with your own physician or healthcare provider to determine what is right for you.


Why Sure They Do !

Remember

Pet food with poison that was just an ingredient from China

Poison in plastic toy parts

Food recalls, which are made after the damage has been done.

And how many more can you cite?






Didn't you feel safe ?

Remember

Pet food with poison that was just an ingredient from China

Poison in plastic toy parts

Food recalls, which are made after the damage has been done.

And how many more can you cite?






Didn't you feel safe ?

Join Our Soy Is Bad Patrol !

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