Rice is often the first food
infants are given because it’s unlikely to cause allergic reactions and it’s easily
digested. Rice also figures prominently in many cuisines and is consumed in
greater quantities by those on gluten free diets, as rice is gluten free. Plus,
if you have people list the “good” carbs, brown rice is high on the list. The
news that Consumer Reports found most white and brown rice samples to contain
worrisome levels of arsenic is concern for many people.
We talked about arsenic in apple juice last year. It was Dr Oz pushing the envelope with testing. Many
criticized him for blowing the scare out of proportion. Even after 200 rice
samples were tested by Consumer Reports and many found to exceed the acceptable
arsenic content for water (acceptable?) the FDA isn’t alarmed. “We’re not prepared, based on preliminary data, to
advise people to change their eating patterns.” And to my surprise (sarcasm),
the Rice Federation agrees “there is no documented evidence of actual
adverse health effects from exposure to arsenic in U.S.-grown rice.” This
reminds me of a client who recently called her doctor’s office complaining of
chest pains. They told her they didn’t have any openings.
FDA and rice peops how’s this for alarming info:
“In 2001, the National Academy of Sciences
estimated that people drinking arsenic-contaminated water at 10 parts per
billion would have a 1-in-300 risk of developing cancer over their lifetimes.
Recent research suggests that people ingest about that much arsenic in a just a
half-cup serving of rice, not an unusual amount for millions of Americans.”
So how did the arsenic get in the
rice? Aren’t arsenic-containing pesticides banned? They are now, for the most
part, but they weren’t in the past. Actually fields where cotton used to grow
are suggested to figure into this situation. Remnants of the arsenic remain in
the soil. Since rice gets flooded with water as it grown, it’s the perfect
chemical storm. It absorbs the arsenic to a degree other crops do not. Rice,
from Southern states, has higher arsenic levels than California or Asian rice
according to this first round of testing.To add insult to injury, brown rice
may have higher levels of arsenic than white rice. The fibrous bran layer,
removed and polished in white rice, remains in tact in brown rice. The very
part of the grain that’s ups the nutritional ante here acts like a chemical
sponge. Before you switch back to white, less arsenic doesn’t mean safe.
Now that I’ve hopefully riled you
up, what should you do? First, think about how often you eat rice. For some,
rice is mainly a sushi ingredient. Note that brown rice syrup is also used as a
sweetener. Perhaps you eat pad thai or rice cakes or rice milk? I liked this
arsenic quiz to assess potential arsenic in your diet.We contacted the manufacturers of
Foodtrainers’ products that contain rice. We immediately received a response
from 22-Day Bars. They told us their brown rice protein was from Axiom Foods.
They sent us a link for their independent testing for arsenic. I
would hope other companies would take matters into their own hands.
When you cook rice at home (I say stick to brown)
wash it well. You can also cook it ala pasta in a lot more water than you
normally do. This is an Asian method and at the end of the cooking time you can
drain excess water. We are suggesting our prenatal clients skip rice
altogether. For the rest of us, these
are completely my own guidelines but I would keep rice to once per week. If you
have a baby eating rice cereal ask your pediatrician about switching to oats
instead.
Representatives from NY, NJ and CT are trying to
introduce legislation for the FDA to set limits for arsenic in rice (the only
limit in place is for water). The bill, appropriately titled the
R.I.C.E Act, or Reducing food-based Inorganic and organic Compounds Exposure
Act will hopefully accomplish that.
This is scary stuff. If there’s any
way to see a bright side it’s that maybe I have a way to have clients control
their sushi intake…but the mercury in the fish didn’t do it so I’m not sure.
Where do you get rice in your diet? Have you changed your rice
intake since learning of the arsenic concerns? Any steps I didn’t mention to
safeguard yourself or your family?
I'm not a big sushi eater, especially when it's cold (though sashimi is kind of nice sometimes), but I used to eat a lot of brown rice when I was living with someone else because it was easy to make a big pot of it for the week. I kind of fell out of the habit over the past year, but I guess that's not such a bad thing after all! Thanks for the cooking tips so when I do make it, I can do it safely.
ReplyDeleteI lived on brown rice in college, in Louisiana. And I thought my pre-nutrition sweetener abuse was my worst past vice.
ReplyDeleteThis was alarming because we like rice. The last couple of years we've changed to mostly brown rice. I always wash the rice so I feel somewhat safer. Thank you for this post and all
ReplyDeleteinformation here.
keep washing/scrubbing and I would decrease consumption if have a lot.
ReplyDeleteI definitely eat brown rice/brown rice products 2-3 times a week. I'm hoping the R.I.C.E act gets passed..however, even if it does, this proves that we as consumers should be more aware of what it is we are putting on the dinner table and into our bellies, because like arsenic..bad eating habits can catch up to us over time and potentially cause some unwanted results. So glad you gave us some helpful tips on the steps we can take in order to minimize the levels of arsenic in our rice
ReplyDeleteyes, can't wait for FDA or legislation sadly.
ReplyDeleteOur food supply is down right scary. Safe levels of arsenic? Are you kidding me? Ugh. They like to dumb things like this down in the media so the average American doesn't care but goodness...if it's not one thing to worry about it's another! Although I personally hardly ever eat rice or rice products (never liked any asian cuisine and when I eat mexican I usually opt out of the rice except for at chipotle, which I almost never eat, and I steer clear of products with brown rice syrup). that being said...arsenic in water scares me to pieces. I can't afford a reverse osmosis system for my house right now and now I need to look up if my mere brita pitcher filter gets it out. Ug. I wish things werent so complicated.
ReplyDeleteThe news out there just keeps getting scarier and scarier. Nothing seems safe to eat anymore. I used to eat more rice than I do now. I eat a lot of other grains but reading all of this lately, makes me really take a second look.
ReplyDeleteI hear you, tempts people to thumb their noses at healthy foods and scary.
ReplyDeletehave your water tested? And yes "safe levels of poison" doesn't make sense to me.
ReplyDeleteI've been reading a lot about the arsenic issue this past week, but I hadn't seen the actual chart listing comparisons, so thanks for sharing. I think this is a big issue for many people who eat gluten-free. I personally don't eat a lot of rice, and I bake with a variety of GF flours, but I think I will stop baking completely now with the brown rice flour, and use sorghum and other flours instead, although it seems like so much of our food can be contaminated these days. I didn't know the trick about rinsing before cooking...curious if that is the reason we don't hear about a lot of health problems in Asian countries where they eat a lot of rice...
ReplyDeleteI literally eat rice at every meal in some form...rice cakes, brown rice, sushi, protein powder. I love it. I do my best to get organic rice but that's really all I can do! I can't fear rice on top of everything else...
ReplyDeleteNo rice for me, just straight up SASHIMI!
ReplyDeletewell you're safe there (from arsenic).
ReplyDeletemaybe not fear rice but rinse well and if there are products you love contact the companies re arsenic testing. Perhaps a pea or alternate protein to rice?
ReplyDeleteI think it's a little crazy. Rice is huge in chinese and japanese diets, and they live longer than americans.
ReplyDeleteit's not the same rice...
ReplyDelete