Weekend Herald

This chicken has crossed the road

Soup shy of a vital ingredient

- Chicken stock ( Water, chicken, herb extracts) Chicken ( 4 per cent) Potato starch Cream ( from milk) Salt Sugar Maltodexes­trin ( from wheat) My recommenda­tions

Grabbing a can of soup on a cold winter’s night or for lunch on the run is a great idea and most of them contain very few problem ingredient­s because canning means there is no need for preservati­ves. What else goes into them varies from producer to producer but this one caught my eye because one ingredient in particular seemed to make a poor showing in the ingredient­s list. Campbell’s Country Ladle Roast Chicken & Winter Vegetable Soup. $ 3.50 for 505g. make you feel they are unique and premium but when you think about it, all vegetables are farm picked. This is a nice “clean” stock with no additives such as flavour enhancers or preservati­ves. These would be the ingredient­s for chicken stock made at home with a few vegetables thrown in. When I asked various members of my family how much chicken they thought would be in this can of soup the answers ranged from 15 per cent to the very optimistic 45 per cent. At 4 per cent this means there is very little chicken in here. In fact there is 20.2g, which is about a 10th of an averagesiz­ed chicken breast. This will be in here to thicken the soup. Also in here for thickening but also possibly for flavour. Possibly another thickener. This product is quite high in salt at 602mg per 250g serve. People on a low- salt diet are encouraged to consume about 920g of sodium per day. Not too much sugar in here but still enough for a teaspoon at 4.7g. This is a product usually made by hydrolysis, which means taking vegetable matter and cooking it in hydrochlor­ic acid. The result is a product with a meaty broth taste. Disodium 5’- ribo nucleotide a chemical flavour enhancer commonly found in processed food to replace the unpopular MSG. The first three mineral salts are diphosphat­es, which are salts of phosphoric acid and the fourth is sodium bicarbonat­e or baking soda. These could be in here as emulsifier­s, thickeners, stabiliser­s or pH regulators. This additive is a cost- effective way of adding protein to a food that may not have much, as with this one with its 4 per cent of chicken. The nutrition informatio­n lists 5.1g of protein per 250g serve. This is another form of sugar, which is probably in here for taste. With just 4 per cent or 20.2g chicken I think the name of this soup should be changed from Roast Chicken and Winter Vegetables to Winter Vegetables with Roast Chicken, or perhaps even Winter Vegetables that once called out to a chicken as it was walking past. The lack of chicken means that this is a reasonably affordable soup but it also means that to achieve the correct flavour, additives such as a flavour enhancer and vegetable protein are required to give it a chicken taste. But if you’re happy to accept this soup as primarily vegetable soup then it is fine. It’s 98 per cent fat free, has three serves of vegetables per 505g can, has no artificial colours or MSG and is a good source of fibre at 3.8g per 250g serve.

 ??  ?? Vegetable protein extract Soy protein
Vegetable protein extract Soy protein

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