Sudan Red found in new regions of China

By Dominique Patton

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Food safety Egg Food Beijing

More duck eggs containing the carcinogenic dye Sudan Red have been
found in China, food officials said yesterday, expanding the recall
outside of Beijing to the country's east coast.

Last week, 1,159kgs of eggs produced in Hebei Province near Beijing were pulled from supermarket shelves in the capital after tests showed that the red colour of the yolks - thought by consumers to be a sign of higher quality - were caused by dye, likely added to chicken feed. Now eggs produced by Sanhu Eggs in Jiangsu Province have also been found to contain the red dye, according to state media Xinhua. The dye has also been detected in more than 6,000 chicken eggs on sale in two Metro and Carrefour supermarkets in southeast China's Fujian Province. It is not the first time that Sudan Red has been found in China's food chain. Last year, it was found in some brands of chilli oil and KFC products. However, poultry producers continue to use the dye, attracted by the higher prices on eggs with red yolks. The country's food safety body, AQSIQ, has called on local authorities to step up routine inspection and ordered relevant firms to stop production and sales. But the government has been widely criticized by national media for the latest in a series of food safety scandals. "This kind of red-yolk eggs have been on sale for several years,"​ said the Legal Evening paper. "Why didn't these so-called experts tell consumers earlier that red yolks didn't have anything to do with more nutrition and were usually unnatural?"​ Tianjin newspaper the City Daily asked why the government had not taken action until exposure of use of the dye by the nation's CCTV. Beijing has also moved to ban the sale of turbot this week after the food safety officials found high levels of cancer-causing agents in the fish on sale in Beijing markets. Local media said today that other cities like Tianjin and Xi'an have also started inspections after officials in Shanghai discovered contaminated turbot on Friday. In the last week media has also reported that a northeast China food processor polished up and sold tonnes of rice, some of it 17 years old, that could be harmful if eaten.

Related topics Ingredients

Related news

Related products

show more

Dairy proteins now available from Univar Solutions

Dairy proteins now available from Univar Solutions

Content provided by Univar Solutions | 20-Sep-2023 | White Paper

Foodology by Univar Solutions proudly partners with Leprino Nutrition as their North American distributor of nutritional ingredients and dairy products.

Clean Label Ingredients for Shelf-Life Extension

Clean Label Ingredients for Shelf-Life Extension

Content provided by Lesaffre | 19-Sep-2023 | White Paper

Product waste skyrockets without anti-staling agents and mold inhibitors. But consumers are scrutinizing labels more than ever before. How can you have...

Sustainability Claims Impact on Consumer Purchases

Sustainability Claims Impact on Consumer Purchases

Content provided by ADM | 07-Sep-2023 | Insight Guide

Discover what consumers say about sustainability claims versus what they do in the grocery aisle. Find out in this can’t-miss proprietary study from ADM:...

Cost-effective & efficient: Angel Prebake Solution

Cost-effective & efficient: Angel Prebake Solution

Content provided by Angel Yeast – Yeast and Baking Ingredients | 31-Jul-2023 | White Paper

After years of systematic research and practical application in the production process and essential ingredients for frozen dough, Angel's pre-bake...

Related suppliers

Follow us

Products

View more

Webinars