Become a Member
Food

How to eat well: the sticky problem of labelling

March 8, 2013 21:34

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

1 min read

Aside from writing for august publications, a large part of my time is spent developing foods. At present I am working on a new range for a large and respected brand, which entails understanding the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) rulings on health claims.

You may not be aware of them but, in short, they are designed to regulate the potentially fanciful claims that can appear on food labels.

New and stricter rules became law in December last year but so far it seems as if few UK brands have changed their labels to comply. If you saw a food, lets say a cereal bar, that claimed to give you energy, or a tea that claimed immune boosting properties, then these claims are now regulated.

Looking at energy, for example, any cereal bar that contained grains would therefore contain B vitamins. B vitamins play an important role in the process of making energy, and so it follows that this food gives you energy. Bingo, there’s your claim.