Ingredient Transparency
Cross-source consensus on Ingredient Transparency from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Ingredient transparency means companies should disclose product contents, especially additives, dyes, processing aids, or flavoring agents that consumers may not notice. — Food Activism, Processed Food, and Family Food Culture
- The beer campaign is used to argue that consumers knew less about beer ingredients than about ingredients in cleaners or soda. — Food Activism, Processed Food, and Family Food Culture
- Using a chemical in the United States but not in other countries is described as a persuasive campaign point. — Food Activism, Processed Food, and Family Food Culture
- The article portrays U.S. food standards as weaker than those of many other countries, with companies sometimes selling cleaner products overseas. — Food Activism, Processed Food, and Family Food Culture
- The article argues that hidden processing also occurs in restaurants that rely on large suppliers and pre-made industrial ingredients. — Food Activism, Processed Food, and Family Food Culture