HairBoutique.com
  Banishing Bad Hair Days since 1997!™
  Search Hairboutique
 
 
Home
 
 
Shop Now
 
 
Sale Items
 
 
Articles
 
 
Blog
 
 
Gallery
 
 
HairTalk™
 
 
Ask Karen™
 
 
Videos
 
 
Alerts
 
 
Press
 
 
Dressing Room
 
 
Hair News
 
 
Hair Glossary
 
 
Salon Directory
 
 
myHairBoutique
 
 
CosmoBar
 
 
Fun Zone
 
 
Free Classifieds
 

HairBoutique Blog


    • Home
  • Pages

    • About
    • Author Feeds
    • By Date
    • Register
    • Talk Forum
  • Categories

Subscribe
RSS
My Zimbio
Top Stories




View blog authority
Add to Technorati Favorites
Health
Top Blogs
Health blogs
Health Blogs
Blog Directory - Blogged




« Real Housewife Bethenny Frankel Tied Knot With Jason Hoppy
Miss America 2010 Lent Hand To Keep America Beautiful »
 

Human Hair In Food?

Human Hair In Food? Human Hair In Food? Human Hair In Food?

Human Hair In Food?The Baltimore Sun dated March 27th had a fascinating hair related article.  Well sort of.

The Sun was talking about an article done by Mother Jones and was about remy hair often used in hair extensions and wigs.  The headline for the Mother Jones article was “The Human Hair Additive In Your Food.”

(Image of hair being cut – Haap Media, Inc., – All Rights Reserved)

Scott Carney, the writer of the piece explained that hair clippings from short hair are used mainly as fertilizer or as source materials for L-cysteine which is a common food additive.  L-cysteine is am important amino acid that helps hair maintain a strong and healthy mantle.

L-cysteine is also a meat flavor enhancer, an expectorant and even a cigarette additive.

Does that mean you’re eating human hair when you eat certain foods with L-cysteine listed on the ingredients.  Most likely not.

L-cysteine is also derived from other sources not human hair related including synthetically in labs.  In fact, the majority of food manufacturers avoid using a human hair related L-cycteine for a variety of reasons.  Yes, it sounds a little strange but not too worry.

Some food manufacturers will utilize sugar or syrup or even duck-feathers as the base for the creation of the popular amino acid.

If the thought that you L-cysteine might come from human or animal feathers or fur, you may wish to read all the ingredients and either write to the manufacturer or cross that food off your list.

“[M]any industrial food makers buy their cysteine prepackaged with yeast and other additives as bulk ‘dough conditioners,’ without regard to the origin of the components,” a rabbi told the Mother Jones reporter.

More Information

Please follow me on Twitter at: http://Twitter.com/HairBoutique. I look forward to meeting new people from all walks of Twitter and learning from their Tweets. Visit us at Hairboutique.com located at: http://www.HairBoutique.com, on Facebook, MySpace and YouTube.

Thank you for visiting us at The HairBoutique Blog and for leaving your comments. They are very much appreciated. We apologize in advance but must remove any direct advertisements or solicitations.

Human Hair In Food? Human Hair In Food? Human Hair In Food?

Related posts:

  1. Human Hair Waste As Food Fertilizers
  2. Monkeys Pluck Human Hair To Floss Teeth
  3. Hair Braiding In New Jersey Salons Tied To Human Trafficking Operations
  4. Julia Louis Dreyfus Ate Ellen’s Cat Food
  5. Food And Beverages Designed To Provide Beauty Or Hair Hope In Bottle?
  6. The Worst Fast Food Cheeseburger in America According To David Zinczenko
  7. Human Hair From Reptile Claws?
  8. Healthy Hair – Luciana’s Kitchen For Healthy Food
  9. Ben McKenzie Has Hard Times, Needs Free Dog Food

This entry was posted on Sunday, March 28th, 2010 at 11:30 pm and is filed under Hair, News, Ramblings On Current News & Events, Short Hair. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply


Blogs (RSS) and Comments (RSS).
Subscribe to HairBoutique.com Blog by Email.

 
Hair Fashion ad
nails ad

Copyright 1997-2012, hairboutique.com, All Rights Reserved. Terms of Service, Privacy Statement, Advertise, Contact Us, Press, Disclaimer