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The Cookware Material Clarity Report

40 min · 29 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Cookware Material Clarity Report

Descripción

A premium pan can tell you it is 5-ply, titanium-reinforced, ceramic, stainless, non-stick, or PFOA-free, while still failing to answer the shopper's most practical question: which layer actually touches the food, and what is known about what migrates from it? In this episode, we debate: is cookware labelling giving buyers enough safety information, or is it protecting them through a compliance system that still leaves the point-of-choice question unanswered? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Contact Layer, Migration, Measured Steel Versus Thinly Measured Coating, Persistence Versus Dose, Declaration of Compliance, and The Missing Assay. This is a standalone episode. No prior episodes required. Related episodes: The Nonstick Inheritance, The Bamboo Cup, The BPA-Free Trap. Topics: cookware safety, stainless steel, non-stick coatings, PFAS, nickel migration, food-contact materials, titanium cookware, cookware labels. Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-cookware-material-clarity-report

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67 episodios

episode The Cookware Material Clarity Report artwork

The Cookware Material Clarity Report

A premium pan can tell you it is 5-ply, titanium-reinforced, ceramic, stainless, non-stick, or PFOA-free, while still failing to answer the shopper's most practical question: which layer actually touches the food, and what is known about what migrates from it? In this episode, we debate: is cookware labelling giving buyers enough safety information, or is it protecting them through a compliance system that still leaves the point-of-choice question unanswered? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Contact Layer, Migration, Measured Steel Versus Thinly Measured Coating, Persistence Versus Dose, Declaration of Compliance, and The Missing Assay. This is a standalone episode. No prior episodes required. Related episodes: The Nonstick Inheritance, The Bamboo Cup, The BPA-Free Trap. Topics: cookware safety, stainless steel, non-stick coatings, PFAS, nickel migration, food-contact materials, titanium cookware, cookware labels. Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-cookware-material-clarity-report

29 de jun de 202640 min
episode The Bamboo Cup artwork

The Bamboo Cup

A "bamboo" cup is usually not carved plant material. It is melamine-formaldehyde plastic with plant powder mixed in, and the evidence points to that plant filler making hot-use breakdown worse rather than better. In this episode, we debate: is the bamboo label a useful shorthand for a more natural object, or the exact word that hides the plastic and heat problem the shopper was trying to avoid? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: Melamine-Formaldehyde Resin, Hydrolysis Not Seepage, The Plant Powder Filler, Mechanism Versus Market Pattern, Authorised Rule Versus Shelf Reality, and Dose Discipline. This is a standalone episode. No prior episodes required. Related episodes: The Cookware Material Clarity Report, The BPA-Free Trap, The Nonstick Inheritance. Topics: bamboo cup, melamine, formaldehyde, food contact materials, plastic-free claims, reusable cups, toddler plates, hot drinks. Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-bamboo-cup-what-the-plant-in-it-actually-does

29 de jun de 202641 min
episode The BPA-Free Trap artwork

The BPA-Free Trap

The "BPA-free" badge tells you one named molecule is gone. It does not tell you whether the hormone-active chemistry has gone with it, what replaced it, or whether the substitute is better, worse, or simply less studied. In this episode, we debate: is "BPA-free" genuine, narrow risk reduction worth trusting, or a true-but-narrow claim that answers a different question from the one the shopper is asking? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Two Teeth and the Bridge, Regrettable Substitution, Hazard versus Risk, The Receipt That Names What the Badge Won't, The Claim Not the Silence, and The Dose You Control. This is a standalone episode. No prior episodes required. Related episodes: The Detox Label, The Safe Substitute, The Nonstick Inheritance. Topics: BPA-free, bisphenol, BPS, food contact materials, can linings, plastic containers, thermal receipts, hormone activity. Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-bpa-free-trap

26 de jun de 202646 min
episode The Permitted List artwork

The Permitted List

The word "approved" on a food additive certifies acute safety and technological need — a real, meaningful evaluation. But the assay that earned the word was designed before the gut microbiome existed as a research field, and EFSA itself says the science is "not mature enough" to include it. In this episode, we debate: Is the word "approved" on a food additive a sufficient safety guarantee for the modern shopper, or does it create a false sense of certainty by concealing the scope of what was actually tested? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Prescribed Battery, The Unasked Endpoint, Trust-Knowledge Substitution, The Two-Pole Error, The Dated Photograph, and The Scope Gap. This is a standalone episode. No prior episodes required. Related episodes: The Detox Label, The Nonstick Inheritance. Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-permitted-list

26 de jun de 202655 min
episode The Pouch artwork

The Pouch

A baby-food pouch can say "no added sugar" and be telling the truth — while being a free-sugar food by the government's own definition. The words on the front answer an easier question than the one a parent is actually asking at the shelf. In this episode, we debate: Do the wholesome words on baby-food packaging give parents meaningful safety information, or do they create a feeling of closure that substitutes for verification no one can actually perform? We unpack 6 concepts you will need before reading the article: Question Substitution, Free Sugars vs "No Added Sugar", the Health Halo Effect, the Soil Inheritance Problem, the Missing Finished-Product Disclosure, and Two-Way Over-Reading. Related episodes: The Detox Label, What the Box Won't Tell You About Your Teabag. Topics: baby food safety, free sugars, food labelling, infant nutrition, heavy metals in food, health halo effect, consumer trust, SACN definition, pouch nutrition, parental decision-making Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-pouch

24 de jun de 202639 min