The Dirty List

What Hidden Ingredients Are Lurking in Your Food?

Expose the hidden dangers in your food and discoverhealthier choices to protect your well-being.

Harmful Ingredients

testCarrageenan

Description:

A thickener/emulsifier made from red seaweed (often listed as carrageenan or E407). It helps keep foods creamy and prevents separation.

Found In:

  • Plant milks (almond, oat, coconut, soy)

  • Ice cream / non-dairy ice cream

  • Creamers + chocolate milk

  • Yogurt / dairy desserts

  • Deli meats / processed meats (as a binder/moisture-retainer)

  • Some puddings, sauces, “light” dressings, meal replacement drinks

Health Impact:

  • Gut irritation for some people: It’s controversial because research suggests carrageenan may trigger digestive inflammation in sensitive individuals.

  • Key nuance: A lot of the “scarier” research involves degraded carrageenan (poligeenan), which is not the same as typical food-grade carrageenan—but consumers can’t easily tell what’s going on behind the scenes, so many people choose to avoid it.

  • Infant caution: Regulators have raised specific caution/uncertainty around use in infant foods/formula contexts (different rules + higher sensitivity).

Healthier Alternatives:

Scientific Evidence:

  • EFSA re-evaluation (EU): Reviewed carrageenan (E407) and flagged data gaps/uncertainty in some areas (with special attention to infants/young children).

  • JECFA (FAO/WHO): Evaluated carrageenan and set an ADI “not specified” for food-grade use (meaning, under normal use levels it wasn’t considered a safety concern).

  • U.S. status: Carrageenan is permitted as a direct food additive in the U.S. (regulatory listing).

  • The controversy point: Researchers and reviewers often distinguish food-grade carrageenan vs degraded carrageenan (poligeenan) when discussing inflammation findings.