Swallow This: Serving Up the Food Industry’s Darkest Secrets

by Joanna Blythman

Paperback, 2016

Status

Available

Call number

664

Publication

Fourth Estate (2016), 320 pages

Language

Original language

English

Description

From the author of What to Eat and Shopped, a revelatory investigation into what really goes into the food we eat. Even with 25 years experience as a journalist and investigator of the food chain, Joanna Blythman still felt she had unanswered questions about the food we consume every day. How 'natural' is the process for making a 'natural' flavouring? What, exactly, is modified starch, and why is it an ingredient in so many foods? What is done to pitta bread to make it stay 'fresh' for six months? And why, when you eat a supermarket salad, does the taste linger in your mouth for several hours after? Swallow This is a fascinating exploration of the food processing industry and its products - not just the more obvious ready meals, chicken nuggets and tinned soups, but the less overtly industrial - washed salads, smoothies, yoghurts, cereal bars, bread, fruit juice, prepared vegetables. Forget illegal, horse-meat-scandal processes, every step in the production of these is legal, but practised by a strange and inaccessible industry, with methods a world-away from our idea of domestic food preparation, and obscured by technical speak, unintelligible ingredients manuals, and clever labelling practices. Determined to get to the bottom of the impact the industry has on our food, Joanna Blythman has gained unprecedented access to factories, suppliers and industry insiders, to give an utterly eye-opening account of what we're really swallowing.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
Now I'm all for science improving food, protecting me from getting food poisoning etc, but I also like my food to be a bit more honest. I'm not one of those people who proudly (apparently) exclaim that they don't eat anything they can't pronounce, I can pronounce 2, 4, di-nitrophenylhydrazine
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without really stopping to think as I was a science student once upon a time. I would also have missed out on quinoa (who knew I was pronouncing it wrong for years? No-one around me!) and Japanese Foods among others. Yes, I believe that there should me more transparency and less lax regulations about what our food is being mixed with and washed with to ensure that it doesn't cause problems with people.

This is an interesting read and there needs to be more research in this area and less acceptance of flavourings and colourings over food that comes from more core ingredients, more acceptance of natural variations and less addition of things that tend to make my mouth feel strange after eating.
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LibraryThing member jemmatcf
Review of the many ways processed food can apparently kill us or at least make us sick enough to wish for death. By a British food journalist, it covers manufacturing of processed foods where even the producers do not think of their product as food. Chemicals used in production are not listed in
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ingredient listings but can leave a residue at a supposedly safe level. But what about that trace amount times the gallons of soda I have drank in my life? Books like this just (helpfully) ruin my love of junk food
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DDC/MDS

664

Original publication date

2015

Physical description

320 p.; 5.3 inches

ISBN

0008157855 / 9780008157852
Page: 0.1628 seconds