* When taking food processing classes we are informed that many foods contain toxic compounds. Cyanide is a nitrogen compound which will clear out of the body. ie Unless one consumes an acute dosage it isn’t too bad. The acute situation that gets pointed to is someone collecting apple seeds then roasting like a nut and eating them. Having your six year old wild child eat the seeds from one apple won’t push him into the toxic level. Cup fulls of apple seeds are toxic. If I had access to the Borden Foods library I could pull out research articles where some grad students are testing cyanide levels. A LD50 (
lethal dose for 50 percent of a rat test population exists based on Kg body weight). ,,, Best practice standards exist to keep the risk of toxic chemical exposure in the US food supply down. ,,, Imported foods tend to be where the news releases about food safety recalls occur.
* Arsenic as referenced by
@Raptor99 is a mineral which will accumulate in the body. ( much like lead does) There is monitoring of arsenic by the FDA. There are news releases which are published which tell processors that there is an issue. The current arsenic concern is that the soil in some rice producing areas has enough arsenic that it accumulates in the grain. When we make baby food from rice we might be feeding high levels to a low body mass infant.
* Standards such as ppm of lead or ppm of nitrate in a water supply where one has to treat the ingredient and / or conduct a food recall are published in the federal register. Corporate legal has to read the Register, not R&D folks.
The video which
@bearpaw8491 referenced is well done.
The USDA does not have an infinite budget. They set standards and food processors are expected to monitor the levels of toxic compounds. Data that the corporate food lab generates is considered secret. Tech folks get reprimanded if they release data. All food safety issues have to be run through the legal department.