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attgig
07-30-2003, 11:50 AM
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/07/030724083004.htm



Edible Food Wraps Can Keep Kids' Sandwiches Fresh And The Environment Cleaner
With a new school year upon us, kids may soon have the chance to eat healthier and also help the environment, using something unique wrapped around their tuna, turkey or PB&J sandwiches. Edible vegetable and fruit wraps, among the latest developments from modern chemistry, could keep lunches fresher longer and be substituted for some non-biodegradable wraps, says the creator, food chemist Tara McHugh, Ph.D.

McHugh, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service in Albany, Calif., says the edible wraps are more environment-friendly than plastic wrap and aluminum foil. In addition to covering sandwiches, she says the new wraps can protect meat in home freezers. And they also add to a healthful diet because each wrap is equal to a serving of a fruit or a vegetable.

"Another advantage of these wraps," she explains, "is that they can provide a glaze or a sauce for cooking. You can use a tomato or ketchup-flavored wrap to hamburgers when you freeze them and then when you defrost the meat you can cook the whole thing, wrap and all."

The wraps come in a wide variety of flavors, including broccoli, carrot, tomato, mango, peach, pear, apple, papaya and strawberry. The fact that they are biodegradable, unlike plastic and aluminum products, is compatible with the goals of green chemistry, which works to improve the environment or prevent harm to the land and water, according to McHugh.

McHugh's work is featured in the April 2003 issue of the quarterly magazine, ChemMatters, published by the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society. The magazine is designed for high school chemistry students and features articles about chemistry in everyday life.

A food wrap is an edible film cut in pre-formed sheets or into envelope-like shapes. It looks like a piece of paper, except that it's made from a highly concentrated puree of a fruit or a vegetable, not from a tree. While a wrap made entirely from fruit or vegetables keeps air from reaching the food, it isn't very water-resistant. This is good because it will dissolve in your mouth. But you don't want it dissolving into your food in the freezer.

To make them more water-resistant, McHugh says she adds lipids, namely vegetable oils, to the wraps. Lipids are naturally water repellent, she explains.

Because the wraps can be made from off-grade produce, she says they could create a new market for farmers. Despite their many advantages, however, McHugh emphasizes that the edible wraps are not a replacement for all other food wraps.

In addition to the wraps, McHugh and her colleagues have created a snack bar that is 100 percent fruit. Fruit bars normally contain other ingredients besides the fruit, she says. "The 100 percent fruit bar has no sodium, fat or preservatives and has 140 calories. It's just available on the West Coast at this point," according to McHugh.

McHugh says the edible wraps are expected to be available in stores by the end of the year.

hapoo
07-30-2003, 12:01 PM
isn't the point of a wrap to keep the food clean? if we eat the wrap too then whats the point?

ufcrusher
07-30-2003, 12:12 PM
Wouldnt it attract bugs then, since it was food based? You would have flies landing on it and then you want the kids to eat it. Yuck!

cheapie
07-30-2003, 02:57 PM
Originally posted by hapoo
isn't the point of a wrap to keep the food clean? if we eat the wrap too then whats the point?

no crap. i don't want to eat something that everyone has already handled!

nickel
07-30-2003, 03:03 PM
ummm, yah, i think i'll pass

blueindian
07-30-2003, 04:03 PM
they're just giving a possibility here. noone says you have to eat it. you could just throw it away and be happy that it's biodegradeable.

kind of reminds me of the disposable plates that you can get which are made from corn.

InfiniteNothing
07-30-2003, 05:08 PM
I think you're supposed to feed the wrap to your dog/cow. And I think the point is biodegradable. And I don't think it attracts bugs.

WhiskeyPapa
07-30-2003, 08:25 PM
Does anyone remember a tv show/movie where the lead character invented an edible tape to wrap around big sub-style sandwiches? They played it for laughs, but I thought to was a really good idea...