You're A Natural
"Organic" and "plant-based" feel like the careful choice on a protein tub — but those words certify how the crop was farmed, not what the plant pulled out of the soil. On the two largest independent tests of the category, plant-based and organic powders carried more lead and cadmium than plain whey. In this episode we debate the real question: is the metal in protein powder a genuine reason to change what you buy, or a spectrometer-era false alarm — one that deserves a testing law, but not a change to tomorrow morning's shake? We unpack five ideas you'll want before reading the report: the provenance blind spot (why a trusted label can point the wrong way), feedstock versus manufacturer (how cadmium rides into cacao and rice straight out of the soil), the hazard index versus the individual, the snapshot versus the running total (how lead and cadmium bank in the body for years), and the ceiling that doesn't bite (why the legal limit and the pack tell a shopper almost nothing). What to do next: for this hazard, stop asking whether the tub is "natural" and start asking whether anyone measured it — look for a batch-testing mark like NSF Certified for Sport or Informed Sport, or a published per-serving heavy-metals figure; take the shake with a meal rather than fasted; lean toward whey or plain over plant or chocolate if metal is your concern; and if you already eat enough protein, the cleanest tub may be no tub. Related episodes: The Pouch, The BPA-Free Trap. Useful for listeners comparing protein powders, whey versus plant-based and organic options, and weighing heavy metals like lead and cadmium, food-labelling claims, supplement safety, and third-party batch testing. Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-clean-protein-paradox
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