Calcium Propionate vs Erythorbic Acid: which is worse?
Quick answer: Both score equally on our risk model. Calcium Propionate is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US; Erythorbic Acid is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US.
| Property | Calcium Propionate | Erythorbic Acid |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | Allowed | Allowed |
| US status | Allowed | Allowed |
| Risk level | low | low |
| Banned in | — | — |
| Restricted in | — | — |
| Category | preservative | preservative |
| Where it hides | Wonder Bread, Pepperidge Farm Bread, Mission Tortillas | Oscar Mayer Hot Dogs, Hillshire Farm Sausage, Boar's Head Ham |
What is Calcium Propionate?
Calcium propionate is the calcium salt of propionic acid, a short-chain fatty acid naturally produced during fermentation. It is one of the most widely used mold inhibitors in commercial bread and baked goods. It works by penetrating fungal cells and lowering internal pH to inhibit growth.
What is Erythorbic Acid?
Erythorbic acid is a stereoisomer of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) produced by fermentation of sucrose. While it has similar antioxidant properties to vitamin C, it has very little vitamin C activity (approximately 5%). It is primarily used in meat curing to accelerate the conversion of nitrite to nitric oxide, thereby speeding up the development of the characteristic pink color in cured meats.
Documented risks
Calcium Propionate: Generally recognized as safe. However, a 2012 study in the Journal of Pediatric Child Health (Dengate & Ruben) and a 2019 study published in Science Translational Medicine found that calcium propionate induced insulin resistance in a mouse model and raised metabolic concerns. The 2019 animal study, conducted by Bhatt et al., found that propionate triggered glucagon and norepinephrine secretion. Some open-label human studies and parental reports have linked calcium propionate to irritability, sleep disturbance, and behavioral changes in sensitive children, though these lack robust clinical trial evidence. Most regulatory agencies consider it safe at current use levels.
Erythorbic Acid: Erythorbic acid is generally recognized as safe. It is not carcinogenic, mutagenic, or teratogenic. At very high doses in animal studies, no toxicity was observed. It is metabolized similarly to ascorbic acid. When used alongside nitrites in cured meats, it serves the beneficial function of reducing nitrosamine formation, potentially making cured meats somewhat safer. No significant adverse effects have been documented at food use levels.
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