Contact Information: For more information contact: Graham & Associates Emily Allen Dan Marengo (415) 986-7212 foodfacts@graham-associates.com
World's First Credible, Comprehensive Source on Food Ingredients Launches With FoodFacts.com
Ingredient Glossary and Search, Diet Tracking and Food Allergy Alerts; Top Rich Menu of Site Tools
| Source: FoodFacts.com
EDISON, NJ -- (MARKET WIRE) -- January 8, 2007 -- FoodFacts.com launches today as a trusted source
for food ingredient, nutrition and dieting
information. The Internet's first credible and comprehensive resource
on food ingredients, FoodFacts.com also offers powerful weight loss tools
and food allergy and ailment alerts.
A dependable ally in the quest for health and wellness, FoodFacts.com
offers searchable information on more than 9,000 food
ingredients and more than 30,000 name-brand food products. Its
database contains comprehensive ingredient breakdowns on food items
obtained directly from UPC food labels or manufacturers, as well as the
FDA, USDA and other primary sources. FoodFacts.com is fiercely independent
and not associated with any food companies, manufacturers, distributors, or
restaurants.
The vast majority of searchable ingredient and nutritional information on
FoodFacts.com is free to users. The site's searchable ingredient glossary
renders detailed descriptions of everything from acai to hydrogenated palm
oil (trans fatty acids) to pomegranate juice. Items may be searched by
brand, UPC code, food category, ingredients, manufacturer, and
vitamin/nutritional value. All product ingredients link back to the
glossary for detailed information; controversial ingredients are colored
fuchsia.
For an annual subscription of $29.95 -- less than $2.50 a month -- members
can create a personal nutritional
profile that unlocks a vault of valuable functions. Members can design
"real" diets by entering their weight loss goals, and adding what they eat
and what they do in a daily activity log to track daily weight loss or
gain. Fat, carbohydrate, protein, sodium, vitamin and mineral intake is
automatically tabulated. This data is also rendered in graphical format so
that users can track their progress against their weight loss targets.
FoodFacts.com subscribers have the added advantage of receiving food alerts and
vitamin reminders. The alert system works on multiple levels. Members can
set up their personal nutritional profiles to include "avoidance lists" so
that they are alerted when specific ingredients from the database are
present in their food -- whatever its nutritional value, good or bad,
anything from trans fats to iron to rolled oats to food dyes.
For those with specific food allergies (peanuts, soy, etc.), an alert
appears when a researched food product contains the allergen. Members with
specific ailments can enter them into their profiles, selecting from a list
of more than 40 ranging from acid reflux disease to stroke, and be alerted
when the ingredient is present in an entered food item -- invaluable when a
certain food has known negative interactions with the ailment. Ingredients
on "avoid" status appear in red on ingredient lists.
While its appeal is universal, FoodFacts.com has special attraction for
dieters, expectant mothers and parents, those with food allergies and
health issues, health enthusiasts of all ages, and health professionals
including fitness trainers, nutritionists and pharmacists.
FoodFacts.com's founder, Stan Rak, noticed the collective confusion of
average Americans over the ingredients listed in everyday food items. His
children were having children, and they suddenly wanted to know more about
ingredients like polysorbate, and what was really in Yellow 5 (hint: avoid
it whenever possible). He established the FoodFacts site concept in 2001,
and five years later it launches at a time when food is headline news on a
daily basis.
For more information, visit www.FoodFacts.com.
Ed. note: While FoodFacts.com is a valuable health resource, information on
the site is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as
a substitute for any medical advice provided by a physician or other health
care professional, or any information contained on or in any product label
or packaging.