US foods banned in other countries

Common US foods that are banned in other countries

Do you love Coffee-mate in your coffee? Does Stove Top Stuffing help make your Thanksgiving prep a breeze? Do you eat the rainbow with Skittles? Enjoy a quick Pop-Tarts snack? Or just gotta join the leprechaun with those tasty Lucky Charms? Some of these are mainstays in American households.

We, consumers in these United States put our trust in the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Agriculture to keep packaged foods, fish, and livestock production safe—but to what standards?

According to the online magazine, STACKER, The U.S. holds liberal policies on genetically modified organisms, which are more restricted or banned outright in other countries. Plus, many American food additives and production standards that have been approved domestically are banned or strictly regulated abroad. However, that could change soon—as of April 2024, California and Illinois have taken action to ban additives like Red Dye 3 and propylparaben, which have been linked to higher rates of cancer development in animals. Other states, including Missouri and New York, have proposed similar legislation to curb use of these additives.

What production practices are standardized in the United States but illegal in other parts of the world?

Click through Stacker‘s list to discover 29 everyday American food products with ingredients that are banned in other countries.

It’s time to go back to eating fewer processed foods.

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