FDA Should Ban Potassium Bromate and Bromated Flour

by oppknx | April 29, 2009 at 08:25 am
1419 views | 3 Recommendations | 5 comments

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Bromated Pizza Flour

Bromated Pizza Flour

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Potassium Bromate is typically added to bread and other flours as maturing agent which promotes gluten development in doughs, making the bread stronger and more elastic. Commercial bakers use bromated flour because it yields dependable results and can stand up to bread hooks and other commercial baking tools. It is also used to render inferior flour with low protein levels more useable since these flours do not develop enough gluten on their own.


Bromate is also considered a category 2B carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), meaning that it may be harmful when consumed. In theory, the substance is supposed to bake out of bread dough as it cooks, but if too much is added, or if the bread is not cooked long enough or not at a high enough temperature, then a residual amount will remain.  



Potassium Bromate has been banned from use in food products in Europe, as well as the United Kingdom in 1990, and Canada in 1994, and most other countries. It was banned in Sri Lanka in 2001 and China in 2005. It is also banned in Nigeria, Brazil and Peru.

In the United States, it is not banned. In California a warning label is required when bromated flour is used. Some organizations such as the Center for Science in the Public Interest have lobbied the Food and Drug Administration to ban Potassium Bromate as a food additive in the <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 />United States. Instead, since 1991 the FDA has urged bakers to voluntarily stop using it.

 

The FDA currently permits the addition of Potassium Bromate in flour provided that its inclusion does not exceed .0075 parts for each 100 parts of weight of the flour (or 750 parts per million). These regulations are found at: http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~lrd/FCF136.html.

 

To avoid packaged foods that contain bromate, look for “potassium bromate” or “bromated flour” in the ingredient list.  Bromated flour is likely to be found in your local pizza shop, but not in Dominos Pizza or Pizza Hut (though it uses bleached flour). You will also find bromated flour in Arby’s French Toastix and Burger King’s hamburger buns. It is also found in hoagie rolls at your local Johnny Rocket Restaurant: http://www.johnnyrockets.com/themenu/ingredients.php. You may also find in your supermarket flour brands, especially Gold Medal flours by General Mills.

 

Whole Foods Markets lists both bromated flour and potassium bromate as unacceptable ingredients for food on its web site: http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/products/unacceptable-ingredients.php.

 

Consumers should be ever-aware of the ingredients they ingest from corporate bakers and fast food chains, and push for local legislation banning bromated flour until the FDA (and the federal government) gets its act together.

 

Read more at: http://www.foodrecalls.blogspot.com

 

 

 


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David A. Smith

The organisms that suffer ill effects from potassium bromate, also suffer the same effects from potassium carbonate, and that when they are fed these chemicals in huge quantities (usually involving craming it down their throats, or "drowning" them in it).  These organisms do not include humans, that is why it is a class 2B

0
oppknx

David,
It sounds like you are minimizing the risks because potassium bromate is listed as Category 2B. I remember whn Chrysene (also a Category 2B carcinogen) was discovered in tests of artificial turf crumb rubber. Folks sought to minimize its presence by calling the PAH a Category 2B risk, but nobody I know wants to ingest or inhale Chrysene. Its also a bit like the Atrazine controversy -- permitted and used extensively in the US, but banned in the UK and the EU. I call it the politics of risk. I can't ignore when governments around the world are banning a substance as dangerous, and the US pretends its safe. I subscribe to the precautionary principle -- let those who want to use a product prove its safety, before its use is permitted.

Rick Tannenbaum
http://www.foodrecalls.blogspot.com

 

0
David A. Smith

I am not minimizing the risk of all category 2B carcinogens.  I am trying to shed light on this particular category 2B carcinogen.  I note how you switch from any sort of technical discussion of the facts, to dissing the US for not following the "rest of the world" in banning this chemical (or in general).  If you look at the history of bromate in drinking water, the US *lead* the rest of the world in banning it.  Yet it is the same set of experimental results that were used (and ignored) in arriving at that decision as this one.  As to "proving safety" before use, this chemical has been proven to be safe for hundreds of years, which is how long it has been used and consumed by humans for this exact purpose.  So unless you are arguing for the mutant rodents that get renal tumors from consuming massive quanitties, what it the point of this exercise?  Not that I expect this second reponse to be posted here either...

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oppknx

David,
I'm not sure where you are going here, but I guess you are saying that potassium bromate "has been proven to be safe of hundreds of years" -- please share your safety data with us, particularly the data from the 1800s. Yes, it was "generally regarded as safe" (a legal term of art) by the FDA (which only means it was in use before it was required to be tested) and that is why it is permitted. If you tried to introduce it today, I'm quite certain that it would not pass muster.  Anyway, feel free to ingest as much as you can. Let me know how that works out for you.

Rick

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D. THOMPSON

It is important to note that flour and breads do not list potassium bromate as an ingredient, as your article suggest.  The packages simply say "enriched" flour or some other general statements.  The ONLY way to avoid potassium bromate is to buy breads that state, "BROMATE FREE" or "DOES NOT CONTAIN POTASSIUM BROMATE" or.....buy organic flour and make your own bread.  I am allergic to potassium bromate and I can tell you if the package does not say potasium bromate is NOT in the flour, IT IS!  BEWARE!

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