Once I started researching BPA-free products, I learned that this s**t is far more pervasive than I’d previously thought! One major area of concern is the fact that almost all cans are lined with plastic that contains BPA, and there is also BPA in the lining of almost all jar lids, as well. While there is clearly a desperate need for Congressional action on this issue (so please sign my petition!), in the meantime, we can do our best to limit our exposure.

The best way to do that is to buy your beans dry (they’re cheaper and  better tasting) and make everything from scratch using fresh veggies. However, these more time-consuming options are not always realistic for most of us. So what do we have to work with?

Sadly, our BPA-free options are pretty darn limited at the moment. Hopefully, companies will start to realize that not only is removing toxic substances from their packaging the right thing to do but also a good way to make money since more and more people want BPA-free goods! But here is what is available right now.

Beans 
Buy your beans from Eden Organics, the only company that currently does not use BPA in the lining of its canned beans or chilis. Here is what they have to say about their cans:
All 33 Eden Organic Beans including Chili, Rice & Beans, Refried, and Flavored, are cooked in steel cans coated with a baked on oleoresinous c-enamel that does not contain the endocrine disrupter chemical, bisphenol-A (BPA). Oleoresin is a non-toxic mixture of an oil and a resin extracted from various plants, such as pine or balsam fir. These cans cost 14% more than the industry standard cans that do contain BPA. The Ball Corporation tells us that Eden is the only U.S. food maker to date to use these BPA free cans and we have been since April 1999.”

Tomatoes
Unfortunately, there are currently no BPA-free canned tomatoes available because highly acidic foods like tomatoes apparently require super strong (highly toxic) linings. So even good ol’ Eden Organics has been forced to continue using BPA in the linings of its canned tomato products. 

However, Pomi uses Tetra Pak packaging for its tomato products and Tetra Pak does not include BPA. Pomi sells chopped and strained tomatoes as well as marinara sauce. Pomi’s tomatoes are packaged in Italy so the carbon footprint of these tomatoes is gonna be pretty big. The Tetra Pak packaging also looks to be unrecyclable – two strikes against it in my opinion. I guess we get to pick our poison on this one — planetary or personal…

Trader Joe’s also sells a Tetra Pak packaged tomato sauce (which may even be Pomi’s marinara in a TJ’s box…) and thanks to the magic that is Trader Joe’s, they’re probably also a good deal cheaper than the Pomi brand.

If you’re not excited about the Pomi/Trader Joe’s tetra pak tomatoes, you can also limit your exposure to BPA somewhat by buying tomatoes/tomato sauce in glass jars. They are not BPA-free because BPA is used in the lining of the frikking jar lids, but given that the tomatoes or sauce are not that likely to touch the lid of the jar, my highly scientific guess is that tomatoes packed in glass jars are probably a lot healthier than canned tomatoes. There is one company, Bionaturae, that makes its glass jars without BPA in the lining of the lids. However, their lids are lined with a a PVC-based organosol lacquer and since PVC is another toxic chemical we are all supposed to avoid, this does not really inspire confidence. Makes me feel like lobbing rotten tomatoes…

So there you have it. Please write in with any other additional info you may have on this topic. And please do sign my petition asking Congress to get off its butt and reform the Toxic Substances Control Act ASAP.

Special thanks to Alicia at the Soft Landing for her great post on BPA-free tomatoes :)

A few more posts you might like:
  • Got BPA? Switch To Glass Storage Containers 
  • Say Buy-Bye To Bottled Water 
  • Which Brand of Milk Is Best?
  • Forget Free-Range, Buy Pasture-Raised Eggs From a Local Farm
  • No More Toxic Alphabet Soup For Me

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A reader recently asked me if I could expand the post I did last year on “choosing the right milk” to include eggs, another food for which there a lot of confusing buying options. Although there are more details below, the short answer is that you should look for eggs that are “pasture-raised” from a farm near you.
Pasture-raised eggs from Eatwell Farms by Eve Fox, garden of eating blog

Pasture-raised is pretty much what it sounds like — they are eggs laid by hens that are raised with open access to pasture where they can scratch, peck, bask in the sun, eat and run around to their hearts content.
Unfortunately, “organic”, “cage-free”, and “free-range” classifications/certifications do not guarantee that the birds are fed a natural diet or that they live the life of a normal chicken, complete with keeping their beeks (egg-laying hens raised in factory farms routinely have their beeks cut off – a truly horrible practice that is done to prevent them from drawing blood in their extremely close living quarters), having enough room not just to turn around but also to run around in, as well as unlimited access to the real outdoors and all the sunlight, yummy grass, and nutritious bugs they desire (see below for a photo of the lucky hens at Eatwell Farm, enjoying some fresh pasture.)
Eatwell Farm Hens Enjoying New Pasture

For example, the USDA defines “free-range” as meaning “allowed access to the outdoors.” Unfortunately, for many “free-range” birds, this merely means that the factory farm leaves a tiny hatch on its shed open to a bare external concrete yard for a certain number of minutes each day, an “opportunity” the chickens have likely never even learned to take advantage of (’cause really, what would they gain from that sort of outdoor access…?)
“Organic” certification refers solely to the certification of the birds’ feed and while it is certainly marginally better to buy factory-farm organic eggs than not, organic feed does not a healthy, happy chicken (or egg) make.
In addition to the fact that pasture-raised animals have lives worth living (which cannot be said of most birds raised on factory farms, even the ones that sell “cage-free” eggs), there are a lot of benefits to us, the egg eaters, as well.
Although the results vary slightly for each batch of eggs tested (since pasture-raised chickens’ diets do vary by farm and by season, unlike factory-raised birds that eat the same thing all year round), the benefits are clear: pasture-raised eggs contain significantly less cholesterol and saturated fats and significantly more Omega-3 fatty acids, Vitamin E, Vitamin A, and Beta Carotene than their factory-farmed counterparts. If you’re interested in the research, check out the results of this Mother Earth News study as well as the additional studies listed in the Mounting Evidence section at the bottom of page 4.

The other criteria, buying eggs that are raised locally, is important for three reasons: 
  1. the eggs you receive will be fresher and more nutritious for you and your family, 
  2. you will be supporting your local farmers and your local economy, and 
  3. the carbon footprint of your egg-consumption will be lower since they only have to be transported a short distance to reach you.
We buy delicious, pasture-raised eggs straight from our CSA, Eatwell Farm. The eggs from their chickens (see the photo of “the girls”, as Eatwell calls them, below) have rich golden yolks that “stand up” — one sure sign of a fresh, nutritious egg. 
"The girls" -- Eatwell Farm's pasture-raised egg-laying hens, photo courtesy of Eatwell Farm

If you can’t find pasture-raised eggs at your local farmers’ market, these sites can help you locate a good local source: http://www.localharvest.org, http://www.eatwild.com, and http://www.eatwellguide.org (if you know of a farm near you that sells pasture-raised eggs, encourage them to submit their listing to these sites as they’re always trying to build their databases.)
You can also raise your own eggs! This is as fresh and as local as it gets. Raising backyard chicken appears to be a quickly-growing trend. In addition to the chickens that belong to my back neighbors, Fran and Chip, and the flock at the Edible Schoolyard (see photo of their sign below) two blocks from our house, I know of at least three other small flocks of chickens being raised right here in my little North Berkeley neighborhood. If you’re interested in this idea, stay tuned as I will be doing a post on backyard chickens soon.
No Dogs Please - Chickens at Play sign on gate to the Edible Schoolyard in North Berkeley

If you really can’t find pasture-raised, local eggs for some reason (they’re easier and easier to find), I would recommend buying an organic, free-range option from a more trusted brand, such as Organic Valley or Clover (see my milk post for a review of different organic brands) since they purchase from a network of smaller farms, increasing the chance that the birds are treated more humanely. Also look for a brand that is “Humane-certified”.

Greening Your Kitchen logo

In case you’ve missed the earlier entries in this series, see below for more ways to Green Your Kitchen:
  • Got BPA? Switch to Glass Storage Containers
  • How To Choose the “Right” Milk
  • BYOB (Bring Your Own Bags)
  • Say ‘Buh-Bye’ to Bottled Water
  • Nix the Antibacterials
  • Plant an Herb Garden
  • Buy In Bulk
  • Grow Your Own Garlic
  • Slay the Energy Vampires

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I have about the toxins in plastic for several years, but concerns now that I have a baby, I’m much more freaked out about it. There are millions of plastic baby products (most of which are manufactured in China that is not the best results when) about the safety of consumers, but my sweet, small, 8-month-old son also wants each and put each of them in his mouth! This does not apply, like the best combo I think. . . So far, all the hoopla BPA (bisphenol A), an organic compound that serves as a building block of several common plastics has centered. Unfortunately, BPA is also happens to be an endocrine disruptor, which can imitate the body’s own hormones (estrogen specifically), leading to adverse health effects such as cancer, diabetes, heart disease, infertility and mental retardation. And unfortunately, babies and children are the most sensitive to the disturbing and harmful effects. Pretty scary stuff. . . Although my husband and I dropped our Nalgene bottles in favor of stainless steel water bottles for several years and I am looking for BPA-free plastic products when I bought, I knew there was more we could do, so these nasty toxins out of our home. A simple step, I have recently been in the glass storage container, as the idea (to invest about toxic chemicals leaching into our food and our baby food) gives me the heebie jeebies. In addition to the avoidance of toxic chemicals, there are a couple of other advantages for the use of glass instead of plastic / Tupperware. Glass is easier to clean and more hygienic than plastic. Since glass does not cut such as plastic, glass will not get your storage containers stained by tomato sauce, it will also keep food odors. You can heat food directly into her either regular or microwave oven. Although I kind of anti-microwave, if I am one, I always have my food transfer from the container made of plastic and in glass or ceramics, since heat causes plastic to break and leach chemicals into the food easier. You can also have a tempered glass in the oven without having to transfer it to another court, which saves time and washing. It’s pretty! I love the look and feel of glass – it has a much more beautiful than the dough, the staining is to be played out relatively quickly. If you’re not sure where to start, below are some companies that are stable in different glass containers Outlet sizes and shapes to make (the Crate and Barrel is also a great source for these things.) Some of these companies make of glass containers with lids, but most of the products you will find plastic tops, some of which have a safer use of plastic (no BPA or PVC), but you should check to ensure that when purchasing. I would also recommend removing the plastic top open before heating, no matter how “safe” to be the plastic, I sincerely soon we will hear that all plastics are toxic chemicals leach one kind or another suspect. Anchor (plastic lids are BPA free) Kinetic Go Green glass (top silicon) FrigoverrePyrexCorningwareCorelleI also stumbled on a great site called The Soft Landing, where I these products has been investigated – it is an excellent resource if you start your exposure to toxins like. I recommend that this switch is ASAP. The glass for a long time (longer than the plastic), and it will help you and your family from the harmful effects of plastic and keep a little more trash to keep the landfills. If not, see the earlier entries in this series, you ‘the more opportunities for the green kitchen. AntibacterialsSlay Nix the energy VampiresPlant an autumn GardenBuy In BulkGrow Your Own GarlicSay “Buh-Bye” to Bottled WaterBYOB (Bring Your Own Bags) How the “right” Milk Select

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