The Guardian
Fake-food scandal revealed as tests show third of products mislabelled
Consumers are being sold drinks with banned flame-retardant additives, pork in beef, and fake cheese, laboratory tests show
Felicity Lawrence
The Guardian, Friday 7 February 2014
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Some ham tested contained 'meat emulsion' (meat ground with additives so fat can be put through it) or 'meat slurry' (removing scraps of meat from bones). Photo: Alamy
Consumers are being sold food including mozzarella that is less than half real cheese, ham on pizzas that is either poultry or "meat emulsion", and frozen prawns that are 50% water, according to tests by a public laboratory.
The checks on hundreds of food samples, which were taken in West Yorkshire, revealed that more than a third were not what they claimed to be, or were mislabelled in some way. Their results have been shared with the Guardian.
Testers also discovered beef mince adulterated with pork or poultry, and even a herbal slimming tea that was neither herb nor tea but glucose powder laced with a withdrawn prescription drug for obesity at 13 times the normal dose.
A third of fruit juices sampled were not what they claimed or had labelling errors. Two contained additives that are not permitted in the EU, including brominated vegetable oil, which is designed for use in flame retardants and linked to behavioural problems in rats at high doses.
Experts said they fear the alarming findings from 38% of 900 sample tests by West Yorkshire councils were representative of the picture nationally, with the public at increasing risk as budgets to detect fake or mislabelled foods plummet.
Counterfeit vodka sold by small shops remains a major problem, with several samples not meeting the percentage of alcohol laid down for the spirit. In one case, tests revealed that the "vodka" had been made not from alcohol derived from agricultural produce, as required, but from isopropanol, used in antifreeze and as an industrial solvent.
Samples were collected both as part of general surveillance of all foods and as part of a programme targeted at categories of foodstuffs where cutting corners is considered more likely.
West Yorkshire's public analyst, Dr Duncan Campbell, said of the findings: "We are routinely finding problems with more than a third of samples, which is disturbing at a time when the budget for food standards inspection and analysis is being cut."
He said he thought the problems uncovered in his area were representative of the picture in the country as a whole.
The scale of cheating and misrepresentation revealed by the tests was described by Maria Eagle, the shadow environment secretary, as unacceptable. "Consumers deserve to know what they are buying and eating and cracking down on the mislabelling of food must become a greater priority for the government," she said.
A Defra spokesperson said: "There are already robust procedures in places to identify and prevent food fraud and the FSA has increased funding to support local authorities to carry out this work to £2m.
"We will continue to work closely with the food industry, enforcement agencies and across government to improve intelligence on food fraud and clamp down on deliberate attempts to deceive consumers."
Testing food is the responsibility of local authorities and their trading standards departments, but as their budgets have been cut many councils have reduced checks or stopped collecting samples altogether.
The number of samples taken to test whether food being sold matched what was claimed fell nationally by nearly 7% between 2012 and 2013, and had fallen by over 18% in the year before that. About 10% of local authorities did no compositional sampling at all last year, according to the consumer watchdog Which?
West Yorkshire is unusual in retaining a leading public laboratory and maintaining its testing regime. Samples are anonymised for testing by public analysts to prevent bias, so we are unable to see who had made or sold individual products. Many of the samples were collected from fast-food restaurants, independent retailers and wholesalers; some were from larger stores and manufacturers.
Substitution of cheaper ingredients for expensive materials was a recurring problem with meat and dairy products – both sectors that have seen steep price rises on commodity markets. While West Yorkshire found no horsemeat in its tests after the scandal had broken, mince and diced meats regularly contained meat of the wrong species.
In some cases, this was likely to be the result of mincing machines in butcher's shops not being properly cleaned between batches; in others there was clear substitution of cheaper species. Samples of beef contained pork or poultry, or both, and beef was being passed off as more expensive lamb, especially in takeaways, ready meals, and by wholesalers.
Ham, which should be made from the legs of pigs, was regularly made from poultry meat instead: the preservatives and brining process add a pink colour that makes it hard to detect except by laboratory analysis.
Meat emulsion – a mixture in which meat is finely ground along with additives so that fat can be dispersed through it – had also been used in some kinds of ham, as had mechanically separated meat, a slurry produced by removing scraps of meat from bones, which acts as a cheap filler although its use is not permitted in ham.
Levels of salt that breached target limits set by the Food Standards Agency were a recurring problem in sausages and some ethnic restaurant meals. The substitution of cheaper vegetable fat for the dairy fat with which cheese must legally be made was common. Samples of mozzarella turned out in one case to be only 40% dairy fat, and in another only 75%.
Several samples of cheese on pizzas were not in fact cheese as claimed but cheese analogue, made with vegetable oil and additives. It is not illegal to use cheese analogue but it should be properly identified as such.
Using water to adulterate and increase profits was a problem with frozen seafood. A kilo pack of frozen king prawns examined contained large quantities of ice glaze, and on defrosting the prawns themselves were found to be 18% added water. Only half the weight of the pack was seafood as opposed to water.
In some cases the results raised concerns over immediate food safety. The herbal slimming tea that was mostly sugar contained a prescription obesity drug that has been withdrawn because of its side-effects.
Making false promises was a dominant theme among vitamin and mineral supplements. Of 43 samples tested, 88% made health claims that are not allowed under legislation because there is no science to support them or were mislabelled as to their content in some way.
Even when fraud or mislabelling is found, it is not aways followed up. Once it has detected a problem with a product, a council is required to refer it to the home authority in which it was originally made, which may or may not take enforcement action.
Richard Lloyd, executive director of Which?, called for more effective use of resources and tougher penalties.
"No one wants to see another incident like the horsemeat scandal happen again and the rigorous enforcement of standards underpinned by effective levels of food testing is essential for restoring consumers' trust in this industry," he said.
• This article was amended on 8 February to include a Defra comment which had been omitted.
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Global Post
Agence France-Presse - February 14, 2014
Global police swoop seizes millions in fake food, drink
A global police operation by Interpol and Europol has seized more than a thousand tonnes of fake food and drink worth millions of euros, Europol announced on Friday.
"More than 1,200 tonnes of fake and substandard food and nearly 430,000 litres of counterfeit drinks have been seized," The Hague-based Europol said in a statement.
Operation Opson III targeted counterfeit schemes in 33 countries in Europe, North and South America, Africa and Asia over December and January.
Europol said more than 131,000 litres of fake oil and vinegar -- enough to fill 485 bathtubs -- as well as some 80,000 biscuits and chocolate bars, 20 tonnes of spices and condiments and 45 tonnes of dairy products were impounded.
In Italy, agents rolled up an organised crime network making and distributing fake champagne, confiscating 60,000 bottles and fake labels, while in Bangkok, police seized more than 270 bottles of fake whisky after a raid on a Thai warehouse.
Spanish police detained 24 people after 4.5 tonnes of snails were illegally poached from a forest, while in the Philippines almost 150,000 fake stock cubes were seized.
In France, police shut down an illegal abattoir on the outskirts of Paris.
Colombian police confiscated fake food and drink valued some $17.2 million (12.4 million euros).
"In total some 96 people were arrested or detained with investigations continuing in many countries," Europol said.
"Among the key aims of Operation Opson, which means 'food' in ancient Greek, are the identification of organised crime networks behind the trafficking... and to raise awareness about the dangers posed by counterfeit and substandard foods," it added.
"These results show the global character of this type of fraud and the necessity to tackle these crimes together on a national and international level," added Belgian food safety inspector Stijn Adriaenssen in the statement.
jhe/cjo/gk
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Dr.Axe
Date: ?
Your Extra Virgin Olive Oil is Fake!
by Dr. Josh Axe
This is going to be a major disappointment for some of you. That really healthy olive oil you thought you were purchasing at the store may not be all that it’s cracked up to be. You probably never thought that expensive bottle of Extra Virgin Olive Oil might be laced with GMO soybean oil and herb flavors so it tastes more like real olive oil right?
Americans spend more than $700 million a year on olive oil, but most of that may be waste because of olive oil fraud.
According to Tom Mueller, the investigative author of Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil, 70 percent of the extra virgin olive oil sold worldwide is watered down with other oils and enhancers making them far from virgin.
We’re being lied to by manufacturers who are actually selling you genetically engineered oils that are toxic to your health when you actually think you are getting an oil that is healthy and at the heart of the Mediterranean diet.
Mueller exposes the billion dollar industry, showing how EVOO is tainted across the globe. When Australian researchers went and tested Olive Oil from suppliers in 2012, every brand submitted failed the tests and zero gained a pure certification.
Authentication tests at UC Davis in 2011 tested 124 different samples and uncovered that two-thirds of common brands of extra virgin olive oil being sold in California were not virgin and many had other oils like GMO soybean oil and GMO canola oil added in.
In 2008 85 farms were confiscated and 23 people arrested for their oil fraud. Then last year, a well known spanish EVOO company was busted and the two business owners were thrown in jail for selling supposed extra virgin olive oil that was really a mix of 73% sunflower oil!
Olive Oil Standards and Certifications
According to Dr. Audri Lanford there are actually hundreds of varieties of olives but only a few main classifications for olive oil, including:
> Extra virgin, which is produced by cold pressing and does not use chemicals for refinement.
> Virgin olive oil, comes from a second pressing or riper olives but is still good quality.
> Light, pure, or blends are refined olive oil, which usually means they have been chemically processed and mixed with other low quality oils.
> Lampante, is low quality and the italian word for lamp oil and is considered unfit for human consumption. It may be derived from old, decaying olives, and has been chemically processed.
Mueller, says that Bad olives have free radicals and impurities, so consuming NON-Virgin olive oil can actually be bad for your health where consuming REAL Olive Oil has anti-inflammatory compounds, anti-oxidants and 200+ heart healthy ingredients.
How to recognize genuine extra virgin olive oil
Here are my 5 Tips for recognizing REAL Extra Virgin Olive Oil:
> Be suspicious of any extra virgin olive oil that costs less than $10 a liter.
> Look for a seal from the International Olive Oil Council (IOC).
> Look for a harvesting date on the label
> Anything labeled light, pure, or a blend isn’t virgin quality.
> Shop for oils in dark bottles. This protects the oil from oxidation.
Also, Extra virgin olive oil solidifies when it’s cold. You can put it in the refrigerator and it should become cloudy and thicken. If it’s doesn’t then it’s not pure extra virgin.
Here is a REAL extra virgin olive oil
Here is a link to a great quality brand recommend by the Weston A. Price Foundation:
http://www.radiantlifecatalog.com/produ ... -fats-oils
EVOO Alternatives
Quality Olive Oil is a great healthy oil to have on hand, but it shouldn’t be used for cooking. In that case, here are some other great oil options:
Coconut Oil — Just like olive oil, coconut oil is best when it’s cold pressed and virgin. Do NOT buy refined coconut oil. Your coconut oil should smell like you’re on a beach in the Caribbean. It has a high heat threshold and is full of healthy fats.
Organic Pastured Butter / Ghee – Contains ALA and CLA which can promote weight loss. Also, contains healthy short chain fatty acids and has a higher heat threshold. Stick with Organic only when buying butter.
Red Palm Oil — Red palm oil is made from the palm fruit instead of the palm kernel, and in its unrefined state, it is high in vitamin E and beta-carotene. It’s also stable under high heat and great for cooking.
Sources
Researchers at UC Davis find problems with purity of imported olive oil
Deborah Bogle and Tom Mueller “Losing our Virginity” The Advertiser May 12, 2012 Pg 11-14
Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil
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Your Honey Isn’t Honey