May 13 - What Does the Label on Your Chicken Really Mean?
Buying chicken these days is not like it used
to be. With labels like “100% natural,” “organic,”
“grain-fed,” and “free range,” many
consumers don’t really know what they’re buying.
According to the USDA, “100% natural”
means the poultry doesn’t contain artificial ingredients
like preservatives. But experts warn—there are no guarantees.
“100% natural—remember—no
inspections are done. So we don’t know if those claims
are really true,” says Shannon Wallace, RD, registered
dietitian with Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas.
Chicken labeled as “organic” must
meet much stricter standards. Inspections are conducted and
organic chicken cannot contain artificial ingredients, hormones
or antibiotics. But are those really harmful to consumers? “The
USDA does not make any claims that organically produced food
is any safer or more nutritious than conventionally produced
food,” adds Wallace.
Another popular chicken label—“grain
fed.” This is supposed to mean the chicken was not fed
animal by-products, but just like “100% natural”
and “free range,” there is no outside monitoring
for this claim.
And probably the most confusing label of them
all—“free range.” Chicken labeled as “free
range” is supposed to be leaner, but again, experts warn
the claim can be deceiving. “Free
range does not always mean that the animal has been in an open
area its whole life. It may only mean they were in a restricted
area and let out into that open area one time during their life,”
says Wallace.
So what should you shop for in chicken?
“If you would like to have a healthy diet—trimming
the fat or buying leaner cuts of meat is always important. And
the research is still out regarding these other issues of hormones
and antibiotics,” says Wallace.
Source: Baylor Health Care System
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