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Annatto - help

(3 Posts)
cornergran Fri 18-Dec-15 20:15:56

Until today I had never heard if this which is apparently a natural colour found in many foods and labelled as E160B. A soon to be here visitor has a severe and newly developed allergy to it. She is struggling with foods and I'm worried I will poison her! Anyone able to advise? I'm particularly interested to know which cheese types are free of it and if there is a helpful web site. My searches have brought up generalities and American sites with different brand names. tchconfused. That will teach me to think this Christmas was going to be an easy one. She is eating a very restricted diet at home which I could replicate but would love to be able to give her a food treat and not have to live with the guilt of eating goodies or being equally restricted. She loves cheese but hasn't been able to find out which are 'safe' for certain. Any help from you knowledgeable Grans most appreciated.

Crow Fri 18-Dec-15 20:27:36

Hello cornergran I Googled the actual E160B and this is what it came up with. if you have already done this I do apologise. It would appear that the red, orange and yellow colours are the nightmare!!!! Good luck with all of this.

A yellow, peach or red vegetable dye obtained from the seed coat of the fruit of the Annatto tree, Bixa orellana. May be either oil-soluble or water soluble and is stable in processing, baking and brine.

Mechanical abrasion using food grade vegetable oil produces oil-soluble Annatto. Bixin can then extracted by solvents such as acetone, hexane or methanol, with further processing with an aqueous alkali producing Norbixin. Water soluble Annatto, containing both Norbixin and Bixin which can then be extracted, is obtained by agitation with an aqueous alkali.

Currently being used in place of the highly allergenic tartrazine, E102, although the Hyperactive Children's Support Group believe there is a possibility of an allergic reaction to Annatto.

Used, sometimes in combination with E100, in cheese (Cheshire, Double Gloucester and Red Leicester), coleslaw, crisps, custard, fish fingers, flavoured instant mashed potato, fruit and cream fillings and toppings, frying oil, ice cream and lollies, icings, liqueurs, low calorie spreads, margarine, meat balls, salad cream and mayonnaise, smoked fish, soft drinks, sponge cakes and puddings, steak and kidney pie pastry and yoghurt.

cornergran Fri 18-Dec-15 20:31:11

Yes, crow it's what I found. Scared me to death! She's been told there is no guarantee that it's not in any cheese. Surely not? Thanks for trying to help. I'm hoping there's a Gransnet expert out there somewhere.