Contact Information: CONTACT: Dheeraj Patri FoodEssentials Tel: +1 312 224 8728
Food Fight! FoodEssentials Gives Consumers a New Weapon: Knowledge
New Online Tools Bring Transparency to Food Data and Empower Consumer Lobbies
| Quelle: FoodEssentials
CHICAGO, IL--(Marketwire - April 8, 2009) - Recent moves by major food manufacturers to
remove High Fructose Corn Syrup from products -- despite FDA
recommendations and a costly campaign by the corn lobby -- are indicative
of increased consumer awareness and the powerful influence of online social
networking sites and tools focused on what we eat.
One new entry to the online scene, FoodEssentials.com, provides
complete transparency to US food data, and -- for the first time ever --
enables consumers to search, compare and contrast thousands of manufactured
foods by specific ingredients, allergens and additives. This gives the
consumer a more informed and stronger voice than ever before.
"We believe it is a basic right to know exactly what is in the food we eat.
If you are the parent of a child with severe food allergies, you probably
spend hours studying labels," says Anton Xavier, CEO of FoodEssentials.com.
"What we provide is transparency and knowledge -- that saves time and can
help broaden your diet. Consumers can't possibly know what all the
thousands of different ingredients are, or all of their different names.
Our database tells you -- this is a preservative, this potentially contains
gluten or peanuts or colorants, etc. -- even beyond the manufacturer's
claim. And it allows you to do this with 20,000 plus products."
It's a simple concept -- and it's free. Anyone can go to the
FoodEssentials.com website and conduct a search on a food type and whatever
it is you care to avoid -- or find. What comes back is a comparison of
different brands and how they rank by calories, fiber, sugar, etc. -- or by
all allergens and additives.
When most families can't afford to do all their shopping at Whole Foods,
this online tool helps find the healthiest products at your local
supermarket. Lists of food can be saved for shopping and sharing. And every
product can be closely examined by its nutritional label that is analyzed
and interpreted by FoodEssentials.
Dieticians and online food influencers also get a powerful tool: all of
FoodEssentials' data is available for reference in 'YouTube' style embedded
widgets which can be placed in blog posts and articles. Online publishers
can produce their own lists to compare and critique products by
ingredients, additives, allergens or nutrients -- minus the manufacturer's
marketing noise.
"It's what I believe to be the first of the H&W (Health & Wellness) 3.0
applications," says Mike Spindler of BrandedPantry.com.
Anton Xavier agrees, "Until now, H&W guidance tools have been fairly rigid
and not well adapted to meeting an individual's specific dietary needs. We
provide people with the knowledge and the tools to cater for their unique
requirements. This empowers consumers and ultimately has the potential to
change purchasing behavior as well as the way foods are labeled and
formulated. We hope it becomes a mediation point between manufacturers,
retailers, government groups and consumers."
FoodEssentials was first started in Australia in 2005 as a family project.
According to Anton Xavier, his father was prescribed with a strict medical
diet, but found it nearly impossible to compare all the food labels at his
local supermarket. By 2007 the company (then called EatingSafe) had
recorded, classified, and analyzed food labels for 90% of the Australian
market. Much of their initial analytical work was developed under the
support of cause-related organizations and health professionals. By 2008
they had assembled a US team based in Chicago and headed by CIO Dheeraj
Patri, and are now launching FoodEssentials.com.
FoodEssentials.com is an online searchable database of manufacturer food
labels that can be used to compare products by allergen, additive,
ingredient and nutrient properties. The FoodEssentials analysis tells
consumers what is what. Quickly find the highest fiber children's cereal
without colorants, or a gluten-free and preservative-free salad
dressing. The power of data and knowledge is now in your hands.
To view a media-rich version of this release, go to:
http://www.pwrnewmedia.com/2009/foodessentials90408/index.html