Label Decoder: Lactic Acid

beer
Lactic acid is in a range of foods, from cheeses to jellies to carbonated beverages, but what does it do and is it safe?

What Is It?
Food manufacturers often use the additive to help balance the acidity in cheese and to add tartness to frozen desserts and carbonated fruit drinks. For centuries, food makers have used it to turn cabbage into sauerkraut and milk into yogurt. You might also encounter it in beer, jellies and salad dressings. Enjoyed Spanish olives recently? You’ve sampled the preservative powers of lactic acid. The additive is beloved for its food safety role, too; bacteria hate acidic environments and lactic acid keeps bad bacteria from spoiling food.

Is It Safe?
Almost all living organisms produce this acid. Experts give it the green light, and there are no reports about it causing the body harm these many years we’ve used it. If you see lactic acid on the ingredient list, feel free to take a bite or have a sip.

  • Posted at 9:00 am
  • Permalink

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

3 Comments

Yay! Finally something safe to eat ! Thanks for the GOOD news for a change!

MemyselfandI on September 23, 2009 at 7:56 pm

I don't see how this is good for you. As a massage therapist, this is a toxin that builds up in our muscles, and massage will help the body "flush" it out of the muscle.

Anonymous on September 24, 2009 at 3:57 pm

Anonymous – you are referring to a completely different process in the body. the lactic acid created in your muscles is the result of physical activity, the lactic acid in your food is a completely different pathway and function. Furthermore, recent research strongly suggests that lactic acid is a fuel and not "toxic" or a waste product.

JCh on September 25, 2009 at 10:05 pm

Post a Comment

Required

Required, but will not be shown

Advertisement

Newest Comment

On Fruit Juice: Good or Bad?, CallFritz.com said:

If that is the case, it should say something about the fruit juice it's self. They are not real fruit. How can something so natural be so bad for you? Think about that. I would try a Yoli Health Drink to be on the safe side.

Recently Commented On

5 Most Popular Posts

Tweet with Us

Follow us on Twitter to get site updates, nutrition news and more.

Join Us on Facebook

HealthyEats.com on Facebook
http://blog.healthyeats.com