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We should be thankful for food safety!

In Featured Posts, Food Safety by Prof Edward

This is the time of years when the food sections of nearly every newspaper and food website will contain articles on food safety and tips to make sure your holidays are disease-free. No matter, the odds are that there will be plenty of day-after stories of people eating under-cooked turkey, …

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Making Meat Out of Thin Air

In Featured Posts, Plant-Based Alternatives by Prof Edward

We have all seen and are beginning to discuss the various plant-based meat and milk alternative foods in the market. Most are based on soybean and other legumes, oat, wheat, pea, or nuts. If you’ve tried these products and find them not quite like the “real thing”, you still must …

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George Washington and plant-based diets

In Featured Posts, Plant-Based Alternatives by Prof Edward

Today we began our unit on Plant Meat and Milk. As you most certainly know, plant-based diets have attracted plenty of attention. This has occurred for all sorts of reasons, including health, environment, ethical, and sustainability reasons. Here is an interesting article from the Conversation that was written by Dr. Maurizio …

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Organic fraud

In Featured Posts, Organic and Ethical Labeling by Prof Edward

While at Whole Foods, I compared the organic apples with the conventional apples. They looked the same and may have tasted the same. Of course, the organics cost about 30% more. But really, other than price, the only thing that distinguished these apples was the display sign that said ‘organic’ …

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A New Generation of GMOs

In Featured Posts, Novel Foods by Prof Edward

One of the persistent GMO questions that continues to be debated is the most basic question of all – what exactly constitutes “genetically modified”? Certainly, humans have been relying on hybrids for centuries, whether they be grapes, wheat, or other crops.  Breeding can also be considered a form of genetic …

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Recent Food Recalls

In Featured Posts, Food Allergens, Food Safety by Prof Edward

For reasons we have discussed in class, food recalls are now a very common occurrence.  As mentioned during the food allergens unit, most food recalls are for undeclared allergens (e.g., when soy or milk or wheat or other allergenic ingredients) that get mislabeled or inadvertently added to a food.  While …

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Is what we eat ‘normal’?

In Featured Posts, Food and Culture by Prof Edward

In our topic on Food and Culture, we spent a lot of time discussing the various factors that influence why individuals across the world eat what they eat. As we discussed, culture is one central factor that shapes how we prepare similar food ingredients and what foods we consume. These …

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Ultra-Processed Food Debate

In Featured Posts, Obesity and Food Industry by Prof Edward

Ultra-processed foods and their role in the risk of obesity and other related chronic diseases is still heavily debated today. Here is a link to a debate that was held at the 2022 annual meeting of the Institute of Food Technologists (IFT), which us usually in Chicago. Here, 4 experts debate …

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Obesity-Food Technology Article

In Featured Posts, Obesity and Food Industry by Prof Edward

As we finish our section on obesity, I want to direct you to this terrific article in Food Technology magazine from 2022. It describes the personal journey of Dr. Sara Bleich, a professor of Professor of Public Health Policy at Harvard and the former Director of Nutrition Security and Health …

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Do Americans eat out too much?

In Featured Posts, Food and Culture by Prof Edward

As discussed in our “why we eat what we eat” topic, eating habits in the U.S. have shifted as more calories are being consumed away from home than at home. According to this 2021 “What We Eat in America, NHANES” study, Americans actually eat out quite a lot. Consider the …

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Dorm Food in 2024

In Featured Posts, Food and Culture by Prof Edward

One of the most noticeable changes on college campuses over the past generation has been the availability and quality of foods served in dormitory dining halls and cafeterias. Dorm food use to be very institutional and very boring. Meat from who-knows-where, canned vegetables, with lots of sauces to compensate for …

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Top Ten reasons why you should study food science at UNL

In Featured Posts by Prof Edward

10. State-of-the-art building with modern labs, high-tech classrooms, and student lounges. And a coffee shop next door. 9. We speak Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Chinese, Arabic, Hebrew, Hindi, Kinyarwanda, Nepalese, Thai, Malaysian, Vietnamese, Tamil, and English. 8. We know the how to get milk out of an almond. 7. You …