Kevin Whelan1, Nicola Jones1. 1. Department of Nutritional Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Fermented foods have been consumed for millennia and commercially-produced variants are now available in the food supply. The present study aimed to investigate the availability, cost, ingredients, nutritional content and on-pack claims of commercially-available fermented foods in the UK. METHODS: All products from seven categories of commercially-available fermented foods were systematically identified at eight national supermarket chains in the UK. Data were extracted from manufacturer and retailer websites and were compared between categories using a Kruskal-Wallis test and Fisher's exact test. RESULTS: In total, 143 fermented foods were identified, with kombucha (41, 28.7%), kefir drinks (32, 22.4%), sauerkraut (22, 15.4%) and kefir yoghurts (21, 14.7%) being most common. The number of products sold at each retailer differed between categories (p = 0.016), and was greatest for kefir drink (median = 7.0, interquartile range [IQR] = 9.0), kombucha (median = 5.5, IQR = 11.5) and kefir yoghurts (median = 5.0, IQR = 8.5). Kombucha (£1.99 per serving) and kefir drinks (£1.26 per serving) were the most expensive fermented foods and sauerkraut (£0.66 per serving) and miso (£0.20 per serving) were the least expensive. Energy, fat, saturated fat, sugar, protein and salt content varied between fermented foods (p < 0.001). Nutrition claims were made on 72 (50.3%) products, the total number of cultures was labelled on 29 (20.3%), specific strains were named on 53 (37.1%) and bacteria-related benefits were promoted on 39 (27.3%) products. CONCLUSIONS: Commercially-produced fermented foods are widely available in the UK but are diverse in their cost, nutritional content, ingredients and use of on-pack claims. Consumers should be aware of these variations given the limited evidence of functional benefits from controlled human trials.
INTRODUCTION: Fermented foods have been consumed for millennia and commercially-produced variants are now available in the food supply. The present study aimed to investigate the availability, cost, ingredients, nutritional content and on-pack claims of commercially-available fermented foods in the UK. METHODS: All products from seven categories of commercially-available fermented foods were systematically identified at eight national supermarket chains in the UK. Data were extracted from manufacturer and retailer websites and were compared between categories using a Kruskal-Wallis test and Fisher's exact test. RESULTS: In total, 143 fermented foods were identified, with kombucha (41, 28.7%), kefir drinks (32, 22.4%), sauerkraut (22, 15.4%) and kefir yoghurts (21, 14.7%) being most common. The number of products sold at each retailer differed between categories (p = 0.016), and was greatest for kefir drink (median = 7.0, interquartile range [IQR] = 9.0), kombucha (median = 5.5, IQR = 11.5) and kefir yoghurts (median = 5.0, IQR = 8.5). Kombucha (£1.99 per serving) and kefir drinks (£1.26 per serving) were the most expensive fermented foods and sauerkraut (£0.66 per serving) and miso (£0.20 per serving) were the least expensive. Energy, fat, saturated fat, sugar, protein and salt content varied between fermented foods (p < 0.001). Nutrition claims were made on 72 (50.3%) products, the total number of cultures was labelled on 29 (20.3%), specific strains were named on 53 (37.1%) and bacteria-related benefits were promoted on 39 (27.3%) products. CONCLUSIONS: Commercially-produced fermented foods are widely available in the UK but are diverse in their cost, nutritional content, ingredients and use of on-pack claims. Consumers should be aware of these variations given the limited evidence of functional benefits from controlled human trials.