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Tsikot Member Rank 2
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- Jun 2005
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February 23rd, 2006 03:25 PM #41teka nga.... eh kung nilabas na naman pala sa news yung brand, eh di dapat di na liable tayo na mapag-usapan yun kasi nga it serves as a warning and we are merely letting information given by the government to reach the public.
ano ba talaga brand yun?
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February 23rd, 2006 04:59 PM #42
Originally Posted by van_wilder
Ha-ha! Patay tayo dyan.....
Buti pa tigil na natin yung pagtatanong kung ano yung brand. Sayang lang yung thread eh. Wala namang makapag bigay kung ano talaga yung "banned Soy Sauce".
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Tsikot Member Rank 2
- Join Date
- Jun 2005
- Posts
- 3,774
June 16th, 2006 01:11 PM #43anakng?!?!?!
wala pa rin brand? patay na tayo lahat di pa din alam kung ano ang banned toyo?
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June 16th, 2006 04:54 PM #45
kikoman? i doubt it...tagal na ng soy sauce na iyan...more than 100 years na ang kikoman soy sauce....ang dami na sana napabalitang hapon na namantay dahil dito noon pa...
pwede pa siguro yung mga bagong brand....ano ba talaga brand name kuya?
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June 17th, 2006 01:59 AM #47
13/06/2006 - Philippines agriculture officials are urging soy sauce makers to improve poor manufacturing standards responsible for blocking exports of the product to European markets.
Gilbert Layese, director of the Bureau of Agriculture and Fisheries Product Standards (BAFPS), said that soy sauce has been banned from EU markets due to the presence of 3-monochloropropane-1,2-diol (3-MCPD), a chemical that forms when soy sauce is made through acid hydrolysis.
The contaminant is considered a health hazard by the European Food Safety Agency.
“We have met with industry and told them that if we cannot meet requirements, eventually all our products could get a bad name,” Layese told AP-Foodtechnology.com.
He said that manufacturers should either use natural fermentation to produce the soy sauce or else upgrade their facilities so that they can remove impurities and carry out more stringent quality control.
Exports of soy sauce are relatively minor compared with domestic consumption but the Philippines is keen to grow all agricultural exports.
“We don't want to be known as a country of inferior products. That's why we are meeting with all the stakeholders and making sure we comply with quality requirements,” added Layese.
Exports from the Philippines have been picking up in recent months, thanks to strong demand from China and a more stable economy.
After electronics, its biggest export, agriculture is the next most important sector, with coconut and other fruits steadily growing.
Overall exports climbed 13.8 per cent during the first quarter compared with a year earlier, and March's annual rise of 26 per cent was the biggest for a single month in 6.5 years.
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June 17th, 2006 02:02 AM #49
Vol. 5 No. 5
May. 1-31, 2004
Is your soy sauce safe?
by Junelyn S. de la Rosa
A NO answer would probably send the whole country into a tailspin since almost all Filipino dishes are flavored with the versatile soy sauce. While this issue was relatively resolved a couple of years ago when the local Bureau of Food and Drugs (BFAD) declared that all BFAD-registered soy sauce products are safe, there is still a lingering paranoia that some sauces might not be safe since some countries banned our export soy sauce products a couple of years ago.
To solve the problem, scientists from the Department of Chemistry at the Ateneo de Manila University developed a simple, accurate, and inexpensive analytical method to test whether soy sauce and other sauces contain high levels of 3-MCPD- a dreaded cancer-causing chemical.
What is 3-MCPD?
3-MPCD or 3- monochloropropane-1, 2-diol belongs to a group of chemical contaminants known as chloropropanols. 3-MCPD can be found in some soy sauces that are produced through a process called “acid hydrolysis”. Acid hydrolysis is a modern processing method used to treat proteins such as soya in making soy sauces. However, soy sauces produced using the traditional (natural) fermentation process are safe since they do not contain the chloropropanols.
A study conducted by Australia’s New Zealand Food Authority (ANZFA) reported that two-thirds of the samples containing 3-MCPD also contained smaller amounts of another chloropropanol (1,2-DCP). While these substances are present in very minute amounts in many foods and food ingredients, it has been found that they can cause cancer in laboratory animals fed large amounts over their lifetime.
Scientists said that there is no need to fear occasional consumption of contaminated soy sauces but that regular consumption over long periods of time can be a potential cause of cancer.
Europe’s Scientific Committee for Food said that a person could consume only 0.002 mg/kg bodyweight/day of 3-MCPD over a lifetime without harm to health. Further studies stated that safe consumption levels for 3-MCPD can be set because it does not directly affect genetic material. However, people should be more careful of 1,3-DCP since it is harmful to genetic material. Scientists said that cancer found in reproductive cells caused by 1.3-DCP could be passed on to children.
Banned sauces
In 2001, various studies abroad reported that popular sauce brands contain unsafe levels of 3-MCPD. ANZFA found that some sauces’ 3-MCPD levels were above 3.5 milligrams per kilogram which was way above the level of safe use. Some soy sauce products that were banned abroad included: Amoy seafood soy sauce from Hong Kong, Gia Minh seasoning soy sauce from Vietnam, Kimlan soy sauce and dark soy sauce from Taiwan, Knorr seasoning from Hong Kong, President creamy soy sauce from Taiwan, Silver Swan soy sauce from the Philippines, Ta Tun soy bean sauce from Taiwan, Tau Vi Yeu seasoning sauce and Soya bean sauce from Vietnam, Zu Miao Fo Shan soy superior sauce and Mushroom soy sauce from China and Golden Mountain and Wanjashan Soy Sauces.
Other soy sauces that were removed from the shelves were: Golden Mountain soya bean sauce, King Imperial dark soy sauce, Pearl River Bridge mushroom soy sauce, Jammy Chai pure soy sauce, XO soy sauce, Golden Mark superiro soy sauce, Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce, Tung Chun gold label soy sauce, Golden Swan superior dark soy sauce, Golden Mountain Seasoning sauce, Pearl River Bridge shrimp flavor soy sauce, Pearl River Bridge superior soy sauce, Kimlan Lo Chau, Lee Kum Kee chicken marinade, Sinsin oyster sauce.
Testing for 3-MCPD
To test for the presence of 3-MCPD, the scientists from Ateneo de Manila University have developed an analytical method using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry at a concentration range of 1-5000 ng g-1 using 4-heptanone as a derivatizing ketone and 3-MCPD as an internal standard. Gas chromatography is a method of separating the volatile constituents of a substance by means of gas, for the purpose of analysis. Mass spectrometry, on the other hand, is a method of identifying the chemical constitution of a substance by means of the separation of gaseous ions according to their differing mass and charge. The scientists said this method is safe, simple, and effective. Finally, they are optimistic that this method can be used in the near future to make sure that soy sauce products found in the shelves are safe.
Source: Development of an analytical method for 3-monochloropropane-1-2,-diol in soy sauce using 4-heptanone as derivatizing agent by Fabian Dayrit and Milady Niñonuevo of the Department of Chemistry, Ateneo de Manila University, Loyola Heights, Quezon City
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