Soup

Soup with GMO ingredients sorted by Corporate Owner and Brand – Incomplete List

Campbell’s Pepperidge Farms Chicken & Wild Rice
Campbell’s Pepperidge Farms Corn Chowder
Campbell’s Pepperidge Farms Crab Soup
Campbell’s Pepperidge Farms Lobster Bisque
Campbell’s Pepperidge Farms New England Clam Chowder
Campbell’s Baked Potato with Steak & Cheese
Campbell’s Campbell’s Select Roasted Chicken with Rice
Campbell’s Cheddar Cheese
Campbell’s Chicken Noodle
Campbell’s Chicken Rice
Campbell’s Chunky Beef with Rice
Campbell’s Cream of Broccoli
Campbell’s Cream of Celery
Campbell’s Cream of Chicken
Campbell’s Cream of Mushroom
Campbell’s Garden Vegetable
Campbell’s Green Pea
Campbell’s Grilled Chicken with Sundried Tomatoes
Campbell’s Healthy Request Chicken Noodle
Campbell’s Hearty Chicken & Vegetable
Campbell’s New England Clam Chowder
Campbell’s Pepper Steak
Campbell’s Simply Home Chicken Noodle
Campbell’s Soup to Go Chicken Noodle
Campbell’s Tomato
Campbell’s Vegetable Beef
Campbell’s Vegetable Beef & Rice
Campbell’s Vegetable Beef with Pasta
ConAgra Healthy Choice Bean & Pasta
ConAgra Healthy Choice Chicken Noodle
ConAgra Healthy Choice Chicken with Rice
ConAgra Healthy Choice Country Vegetable
ConAgra Healthy Choice Fiesta Chicken
ConAgra Healthy Choice Minestrone
Pillsbury Progresso Chicken & Wild Rice
Pillsbury Progresso Chicken Barley
Pillsbury Progresso Chicken Noodle
Pillsbury Progresso Fat Free Chicken Noodle
Pillsbury Progresso Fat Free Lentil
Pillsbury Progresso Fat Free Minestrone
Pillsbury Progresso Fat Free Roast Chicken
Pillsbury Progresso Lentil
Pillsbury Progresso New England Clam Chowder
Pillsbury Progresso Roasted Chicken with Rotini
Pillsbury Progresso Tomato Basil
Pillsbury Progresso Zesty Herb Tomato

BPA Spikes 1,200 Per Cent After Eating Canned Soup: Study

Agence France Presse | Common Dreams
November 23 2011

WASHINGTON – People who ate canned soup for five days straight saw their urinary levels of the chemical bisphenol A spike 1,200 per cent compared to those who ate fresh soup, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday.

The randomized study, described as “one of the first to quantify BPA levels in humans after ingestion of canned foods,” was done by Harvard University researchers and appears in the Journal of the American Medical Association’s November 23 issue.

“We’ve known for a while that drinking beverages that have been stored in certain hard plastics can increase the amount of BPA in your body,” said lead author Jenny Carwile, a doctoral student in the Department of Epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health.

“This study suggests that canned foods may be an even greater concern, especially given their wide use.”

The chemical BPA is an endocrine disruptor that has been shown to interfere with reproductive development in animal studies at levels of 50 micrograms per kilogram of body weight and higher, though it remains uncertain if the same effects cross over to humans, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

This study did not measure BPA levels by micrograms per kilogram of body weight, but rather by micrograms per liter of urine, so a direct comparison to the EPA-cited danger level in animals was not possible.

However, previous studies have linked BPA at lower levels than those found in the Harvard study to cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity in humans, Carwile told AFP in an email.

BPA is found in the lining of canned foods, cash register receipts, dental fillings, some plastics and polycarbonate bottles marked with the number 7.

Seventy-five people took part in the study, eating a 12-ounce serving of either fresh or canned soup for five days in a row. They were advised not to otherwise alter their regular eating habits.

After a two-day break, the groups switched and ate the opposite type of canned soup.

A urine analysis showed the canned soup eaters had 1,221 per cent higher levels of BPA than those who ate the fresh soup.

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