Erythorbic Acid vs Silicon Dioxide: which is worse?
Quick answer: Both score equally on our risk model. Erythorbic Acid is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US; Silicon Dioxide is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US.
| Property | Erythorbic Acid | Silicon Dioxide |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | Allowed | Allowed |
| US status | Allowed | Allowed |
| Risk level | low | low |
| Banned in | — | — |
| Restricted in | — | — |
| Category | preservative | additive |
| Where it hides | Oscar Mayer Hot Dogs, Hillshire Farm Sausage, Boar's Head Ham | McCormick Spices, Morton Salt, Clabber Girl Baking Powder |
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.
What is Silicon Dioxide?
Silicon dioxide (silica) is a naturally occurring mineral compound used as an anti-caking agent in powdered and granular foods. The food-grade form is amorphous (non-crystalline) synthetic silica, distinct from the crystalline quartz form associated with lung disease. It absorbs moisture and prevents clumping in powders.
Documented risks
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.
Silicon Dioxide: Food-grade amorphous silicon dioxide is generally recognized as safe. EFSA re-evaluated it in 2018 and concluded there was no safety concern at typical dietary exposure levels; however, the panel noted uncertainty about nanoparticle forms. The food form should not be confused with crystalline silica (quartz) dust, which is a recognized carcinogen when inhaled occupationally. Ingested amorphous silica passes through the body largely unabsorbed.
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