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Pastimes : Vegetarians Unite! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (140)7/7/2000 4:09:25 PM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2067
 
I guess you got lost.

New Soy Products Head to Grocer Shelves; More Than 300 Expected This Year, Then
500

WASHINGTON, July 7 /PRNewswire/ -- As many as 500 food products with added
soy protein are on their way to grocery store shelves, according to estimates
by marketing leaders.
Peter Golbitz, head of an information company in Bar Harbor, Me.,
specializing in the soybean industry, told Food Processing Magazine that he
expects more than 300 new soy food products to reach the marketplace this
year, and that the number will later increase to more than 500.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration last year approved a health
statement for soy foods that can be applied to product labels -- that 25 grams
of soy protein consumed daily as part of a low-fat diet may help reduce the
risk of heart disease.
Although the number of soy products finding their way to grocers had been
gaining prior to the FDA action, the government agency's approval of the
health statement spurred the number of foods receiving added soy protein,
marketers said.
The FDA approval will be a "great selling point" for soy consumption,
particularly by women, Clare Hasler of the University of Illinois told Food
Processing Magazine. Hasler, who is executive director of the university's
Functional Foods for Health program, noted particularly soy's role in reducing
menopausal discomfort, which she said increases women's interest in soy in
addition to soy's health effects against heart disease.
"Although the soy health claim isn't gender specific -- it's for heart
health -- because of women's knowledge of soy and menopause, women are more
interested in buying soy," Hasler said.
She cited "eight to l2 clinical trials on soy and menopause," but said
that most of the studies are too short to show effects. Longer studies, those
lasting more than three months, show that soy eases menopausal symptoms for
women who consume 50 milligrams of soy daily, she said.

SOURCE Foods for the Future
-0- 07/07/2000
/CONTACT: Dean Reed of Foods for the Future, 202-223-3532/

CO: Foods for the Future
ST: District of Columbia
IN: FOD
SU: ECO


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