Some research suggests these ingredients may have effects on microbiota in the gut and might possibly increase inflammation and affect metabolic processes by altering the gut barrier.

The following report is by Jillian Levy, CHHC, per Dr.Axe.com:

If you eat packaged foods somewhat regularly, then you already likely consume emulsifiers even if you aren’t aware of it. You will find different emulsifier types in several different foods, including:

  • baked goods
  • dairy products
  • nut butters
  • margarines
  • ice cream
  • sauces
  • salad dressings
  • and more

Are emulsifiers bad for you or potentially beneficial? It really depends on the kind.

Some are derived naturally from foods, such as eggs or seeds, while others are man-made and potentially more difficult to digest. This is especially true if they’re combined with other additives in ultra-processed foods.

Let’s dive in to the different types of emulsifiers you’re likely to come across, plus the pros and cons of consuming foods that contain them.

What Is an Emulsifier?

Emulsifiers (also called emulgents) are food additives used to help keep different ingredients within foods together. They prevent ingredients from separating and therefore maintain the texture, taste and appearance of foods.

The definition of “emulsion” is “a mixture of two or more liquids that are normally immiscible,” (meaning liquids that won’t form a homogenous mixture without help from additives, especially oil and water).

Emulsifiers can be derived from plants or animals, or made synthetically. They have many functions in food processing, and there are many different types of emulsifiers that are used, depending on the specific product and the purpose.

For example, some help with making foods (or other things like skin care products ) feel creamy, thick or foamy. Others help prevent crystallization, stickiness, or stop water and oil from separating.

What is an example of an emulsifier? One of the most widely used in lecithin, which is derived from foods that contain fats, such as eggs, soybeans, meat and sunflower seeds. It’s a common additive in foods like baked goods, chocolate and ice cream.

Common Food Emulsifiers

Food emulsifiers include ingredients such as:

  • Soy lecithin — This is one of the most common types; unfortunately it’s produced from soybeans, which are often genetically modified and sometimes hard to digest, plus it can potentially cause allergenic reactions.
  • Sunflower lecithin — This is a good alternative to both egg and soy lecithin because it’s vegan, non-allergenic, non-GMO and requires gentler extraction methods
  • Egg yolk lecithin
  • Guar gum (aka gellan gum) and other “gums” like gum arabiclocust bean gum and xanthan gum
  • Carrageenan
  • Pectin (a carbohydrate that’s found in some fruits)
  • Gelatin (derived from partial hydrolysis of collagen)
  • Agar agar (a vegan gelatin and plant-based food thickener)
  • Starch
  • Chitosan
  • Polyglycerol esters (PGE) and polysorbates, such as polysorbate 80 (P80)
  • Stearoyl lactylates
  • Propylene glycol esters (PGMS) and sucrose esters
  • Carboxymethylcellulose (CMC)
  • Ammonium phosphatide (AMP)
  • Polyglycerol polyricinoleate (PGPR)
  • Monoglycerides

Where are you most likely to find emulsifiers? In packaged and processed foods, including:

  • Mayonnaise and creamy sauces
  • Margarine
  • Processed meats like hot dogs
  • Bottled coconut or almond milk
  • Soups
  • Fiber supplements
  • Ice cream and some yogurts
  • Salad dressings
  • Cocolate
  • Peanut butter and other nut butters
  • Frostings, cakes and other boxed desserts
  • Baked products like cookies
  • Crackers and some breads

What is a natural emulsifier?

Natural emulsifiers are made from plants and animal products — and sometimes even yeast and microbes. They include ingredients like gums, lecithin and carrageenan. They’re also sometimes called hydrocolloids.

Potential Benefits/Uses

What is an emulsifier used for? As mentioned above, the main use of an emulsifier is helping stabilize mixture and prevent separating of ingredients. This improves foods’ smoothness and viscosity — plus it enhances the “mouth feel” of some products (how they feel when you’re eating them, such as melty and rich).

Depending on the specific type, other potential benefits and uses can include:

  • Improving thickness and volume of products.
  • Enhancing taste and appearance of foods (making colors more uniform, etc.).
  • Prolonging the shelf lives of different products by maintaining their freshness for longer.
  • Keeping whipped products airy and light.
  • Preventing foods from being overcooked or from softening.
  • Aiding in nutrient absorption — for example, lecithin can help with absorption of fat-soluble vitamins, such as vitamins A, D, E and K. Lecithin also provides choline, which is an essential nutrient needed for cognitive health.
  • Helping maintain healthy blood sugar and cholesterol levels — Supplementing with lecithin can cut total cholesterol levels, while guar gum may help decrease spikes in blood sugar.
  • Aiding in gut/gastrointestinal health — Some provide nutrients that heal the GI tract barrier. For example, pectin, gums and starches can provide probiotics that help feed healthy probiotic bacteria in the gut. Natural emulsifiers might also help you feel fuller since they can contain fiber.
  • Moisturizing the skin — In skin care products, emulsifiers act as emollients to lock in skin’s oils and water. This can help relieve irritated, dry skin.
  • Forming gel-like consistencies in products that are used on the hair or the body.
  • Adding thickness to toothpastes.
  • Adding bulk to laxatives that might help treat constipation.
  • Keeping ingredients in medications or supplements bound and free from separating.

Risks and Side Effects

In the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) considers many emulsifying ingredients in foods as “generally recognized as safe.” The FDA ha specific guidelines about which types can be used and in what amounts to prevent adverse reactions.

Why might some emulsifiers be bad for you? The more natural emulsifiers, such guar gum and lecithin, are associated with few health risks when consumed in normal or small amounts. If you consume lots of them, they might lead to digestive issues such as diarrhea, abdominal pain, nausea and bloating.

Highly processed food additives can be harder to break down, such as CMC and P80. While most research shows they are generally safe in tiny quantities, some research suggests these ingredients may have effects on microbiota in the gut and might possibly increase inflammation and affect metabolic processes by altering the gut barrier.

The good news is that emulsifiers are often only used in small amounts in foods. Still, if you experience any side effects when eating processed foods that contain emulsifiers, consider decreasing your dosage or consulting with your doctor.

Generally speaking, it’s best to emphasize whole foods in your diet that do not contain any additives, so this is a smart habit no matter how well you tolerate emulsifiers.

How to Determine Safety

If you want to avoid potentially harmful emulsifiers, choose organically produced products made with minimal ingredients. Remember: You won’t find any food additives at all in things like vegetables, fruits, 100% whole grains, eggs, fish, nuts or seeds.

Read ingredient labels when purchasing foods so you know what you’re consuming.

Sunflower lecithin is a good option if you do eat foods made with one or more emulsifiers. Sunflower lecithin is generally safe and can be consumed with minimal risk of side effects.

This type of emulsifier is very unlikely to be genetically modified (especially if it’s organic) and doesn’t undergo as intense of an extraction process compared to other food additives, including lecithin produced from soy or egg yolks.

Guar gum, pectin and starches can also make good emulsifiers, since these are more naturally derived and even have some benefits to offer — such as help with blood sugar and cholesterol management, digestion, and feeling full.

Conclusion

  • What exactly is “emulsifying” in food? Emulsifying is the process of combining ingredients that normally don’t mix well and stay together, such as “immiscible” food ingredients like oil and water.
  • Food manufacturers add emulsifiers to foods to support their structure, texture, flavor, appearance, mouth feel and shelf life.
  • Examples include guar gum, lecithin, carrageenan, pectin, starches, and synthetic types like polyglycerol esters, polysorbates and stearoyl lactylates.
  • To minimize side effects, only consume foods containing these additives in small amounts. Eating less processed foods and opting for organic items is a good way to avoid too many additives.

AUTHOR COMMENTARY

Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even as thy soul prospereth.

3 John 2

One of the cons of USDA Organic is that some of these heavily processed emulsifiers can make it through, which is a real pity. Therefore, you must adamantly read labels regardless.

Moreover, Polysorbate 80, for example, is in the AstraZeneca Covid shot: so, if that doesn’t a picture for you…

Why Is The AstraZeneca Vaccine Causing Blood Clots?

BBC Reporter Dies Of Blood Clotting After Taking AstraZeneca Vaccine


[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).

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2 Comments

  • Thank you, Jacob. I didn’t know all of that. I just starting ‘passing’ on all the fat free stuff after learning how the fake sugars & such were doing far more harm than good: how could ‘fake fat’ emulsifiers be much better? Akin to margarine vs. butter. There was also the controversy about estrogen mimic soy effeminizing & demasculinizing boys & men….& then gmo soy & glyphosate complicated even THAT!

    People laughed at me when I just termed it ‘fake fat’ in the grocery store when my husband asked if I wanted full natural fat, low fat, or ‘no-fat’ cottage cheese which I planned to use, & had been using to good benefit, with the Budwig cottage cheese & fresh flax seed oil blend. I couldn’t think of ’emulsifier’ & just fell back to ‘fake fat’ simplicity. There were a couple store employees taking inventory & making an order, who chortled, & a couple fellow shoppers who walked away muttering, ‘fake fat’ incredulously & mockingly.

    I was struck by how like the true Christ, fake Christ subtlety & peoples’ reactions….but how could I explain the full complexity of the issue, the cancer complication and all in but a few words of a passing encounter? And, as such a ‘nut-job’ as they judged me for that interchange with my husband in the dairy section, they were hardly likely to receive a tract from me. I was vexed, angry & saddened. My husband was embarrassed. And all of this took place in a ‘conservative’ Amish-Mennonite shopping place in a community where many ‘liberal’ Christians & Unitarians, most former educators & college-educated, fraternity-sorority comfortably retire, encouraging & supporting the ‘simpler times’ and corruption of the old anabaptist communities by State- monies bribed ‘tourism’ grants, special road permits, and wealthy socialist retirees.

    How do you explain the complexity of all THAT to people who don’t really want to know, & only pat answers or some formulaic ritual magick 1-2-3 repeat-after-me assurance of salvation from men & fire insurance?

    Sigh. Maybe some of these new & well-financed propped up antichrist & New Age Catholics like Dr. Axe and the Catholic & Mennonite & Amish family farm grass-fed, natural fat, & so forth promotors who popped up after the little family & local mom-and-pop herb & nutrition teachers, promoters & tolerant of Bible Christianity & conscientious liberty types were chopped off at the knees by the globalist corporatists & their ‘healing’ system via death by a thousand cuts from banking & loan manipulation & chicanery to the loss of many free family farms, to the draconian crony education & certification & policing agencies coming down on them like the gestapo or the communist secret police in the end……will yet come to their senses & convert, even as we appreciate the knowledge they’re still willing to pass on in the ‘new’ alternative health & nutrition scene, and in the absence of the older, freer ones now gone & not returning, but the price will be high for them if they do, & I fear it’s unlikely.

    Craft is so wicked & seductive, complex. Thank God for the simplicity of Christ, & his never-failing presence with us even through the refining trials & vexations, & his promise that in due time he will cut it off short in mercy & judgment. It’s easy to forget about the chafing & burnings of the refining in the realities of dealing with it all. The Romans 8:28 purposes of God in it & in spite of it all. Even so, come soon Lord Jesus.

    My thanks to you & the Denlinger’s, & prayer for God’s will in these trying times. My support is limited due to my position as a wife, & to past unwise choices leading to indebtedness & investment in things not valued much by the world as of yet; & I sorrow about that & accept the responsibility in due measure. Trusting the Lord to sort it out & sustain in the meantime, & to put my energy into participation & prayer in good faith.

    • Glad we have been of service for you! As I have been saying, I really think patience will be crucial this year, and probably next year even more. It’s going to get rough, but I firmly believe the Lord will provide in these times, and will be made stronger for it.

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