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The Healthiest Chocolate I Could Find
My guest today is “Chocolate Girl” Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate. We’ll be talking about chocolate, of course, how to choose the best chocolate for good health, and Vanessa’s unique chocolate creations. A Certified Holistic Health Counselor who has studied with Andrew Weil, Deepak Chopra, and David Wolfe, Vanessa created Gnosis Chocolate in 2008 at the green age of 23 years old to help her clients experience the joy of conscious nutrition. Gnosis now imports from Indonesia and exports to Japan – it’s a worldwide brand. She directs, product development, sourcing, marketing, operations, and just about every other element of the brand herself. “Yes, it’s a lot of time and energy,” she says, “but if you love what you do, you’ll never work a day in your life.” www.gnosischocolate.com Use promo code “toxicfree10” for 10 percent off your purchase.
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
The Healthiest Chocolate I Could Find
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Vanessa Barg
Date of Broadcast: June 05, 2014
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, and this is Toxic Free Talk Radio, where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world, and live toxic-free because there are a lot of toxic chemicals out there in the world, every place we look, every place we go, unless we are doing something intentionally to be aware of them and remove them from our lives.
There are many products that don’t have toxic stuff in them. There are many places that we can go and have a respite from toxic exposure. You can create your own home to be an oasis away from toxic chemicals. You can even remove toxic chemicals from your body, and you can take nutrition products and foods that support your body in detox.
So there’s a lot that you can do, and that’s what we talk about on this show.
Today is Thursday, June 5, 2014, and I’m here in Clearwater, Florida.
Today, we are going to talk about chocolate, one of my favorite subjects. I love chocolate. But there is so much that could be wrong with chocolate.
If you just go to the store and buy a chocolate bar, there are so many toxic chemicals that could be in them in various ways.
We’re going to talk about those. But we’re also going to be talking about how to choose the best chocolate.
My guest today actually makes some of the least toxic, most delicious chocolate that I’ve ever found.
She’s called the Chocolate Girl. Her name is Vanessa Barg, and she’s the founder of Gnosis Chocolate.
Hi, Vanessa.
VANESSA BARG: Hi, Debra. Thank you so much for having me on this show. I’m truly honored.
DEBRA: Thank you. Thank you so much for being on the show. I met Vanessa last fall at the Natural Food Expo in Baltimore. And her products just really stood out for me so much because she really is taking a whole different approach to chocolate.
But before we talk about what she has to offer, Vanessa, just tell us how you got interested in chocolate.
VANESSA BARG: Oh, my goodness. I don’t know when my interests possibly have begun. Definitely, in the womb, I think. I’ve always loved chocolate since I was a child.
But I was studying at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition in 2006. This is the largest and most incredible nutrition school. They teach 40 different dietary theories.
So I was studying nutrition, health counseling, and just overall well-being, and I had clients who, of course, loved chocolate. And they could really easily let go of their cookies, their cakes, soda and things like that. But they said, “No, don’t take away my chocolate.”
And I knew at that point super food is when each calorie contains more nutrients than your average food.
So cacao really came into a different light for me when studying at Integrative Nutrition, David Wolfe came to lecture, and David is really the world’s
leading authority on super foods and detox about cacao. And when I finished that class, I went straight to Westerly Natural Market, which is my favorite market here in New York City, and I bought a pound of straight cacao beans.
I’d never had them before. I ate an entire pound of raw cacao beans, and I was just fine because cacao beans contain so many neurotransmitters.
Oh, my goodness.
So that’s when another level of love—my life was fully chocolate-addicted to that point.
DEBRA: I hate a cocoa nib. I just ate one because I remember many, many years ago when I first started being aware of all this stuff, I didn’t want to eat sugar. And so I bought just regular, unsweetened baking chocolate.
That was so bitter. I just couldn’t eat it. But at that time, we didn’t have all those other sweeteners that we have now today, so when cocoa nibs came on the market, and what that is just a crushed cocoa bean without being processed or anything.
So when cocoa nibs became available, I thought this is going to be really bitter-like chocolate. But it isn’t. It actually is very edible because it’s much gentler than baking chocolate. It hasn’t been processed.
And so this is really just chocolate in its natural raw form.
But I just took a little, tiny nib. And if you haven’t seen them, they’re very small, maybe an eighth of an inch. And it was just like I had drunk 10 cups of coffee. They’re so powerful.
VANESSA BARG: They are. And you know what’s actually really exciting. It’s actually an urban myth that chocolate contains caffeine.
DEBRA: Tell us about that.
VANESSA BARG: Yes. A whole bar of Gnosis Chocolate contains less caffeine than an entire cup of decaffeinated coffee. In fact, it has very, very little caffeine. What it does contain is a sister molecule to caffeine called theobromine. It’s in the same family called methylxantines.
They test for the whole family, methylxantines. And because cacao contains a methylxantine, and they just group it in as caffeine. They call it caffeine but it’s actually not. And theobromine is very, very different in that it affects your cardiovascular system, not your nervous system, like caffeine.
So whereas caffeine will give you the jitters, theobromine will actually activate your heart and circulation. And so it will give you that kind of boost of energy, but not the nervous, kind of, jittery kind.
And that’s one very common misconception about chocolates that I’d love to bust through this call because it’s just incredible the difference when you know that. And so it’s great to use chocolate as a medicine in that it will strengthen your heart amongst many, many other health benefits.
But you’re absolutely right in that most chocolates are incredibly-processed but the raw cacao bean.
The definition of raw food is when it’s not heated above 118-degrees. And so raw cacao is so different and it’s much gentler. It is still on the bitter side of the palate, but what I really think is interesting to think about this food is bitter greens and bitter beans.
Bitter foods are actually very, very healthy for us. If you think about a little bit of bitter greens, it’s on the more bitter side of the palate, but that’s actually medicine.
DEBRA: I think that’s right. Go ahead.
VANESSA BARG: If you look into the history of medicine, if you’re looking into whether it’s ayurvedic medicine or Chinese medicine, […] bitter foods. And so it’s interesting to see as our society becomes and more aware of toxicity of sugars and overconsumption of sugars, we’re starting to lean more towards the bitter side.
Just the cacao percentage, people are trying to appreciate that darker, more complex flavor profile.
I actually love to sprinkle cacao nibs right onto my salad, and go sweet, and go savory with it.
DEBRA: You can. We have so much to talk about, about chocolate. But let’s just say this right now. There’s a spectrum of chocolate—chocolate in different forms. So let’s start with the cacao bean, and that gets crushed to a cocoa nib.
And then where do we go from there? What are the different forms?
VANESSA BARG: When I started making chocolate, there were some brands of raw cacao available in the market, but primarily, it’s just either the bean or the paste. And that really all that was available at the time.
So we’ve come a really, really long way since then, as more chocolate manufacturers have come out.
But when you take the cacao bean out of the cacao pod, the fresh pod, then you ferment that and you dry them in the sun, and you’re left with the cacao beans. And that gets crushed into the nib, and the nib is also—you’re not just crushing, you’re also removing the shell as well.
And then you take those, and what we do is we put them into a granite stone grinder. And so slowly, over time, many, many hours of slow-grinding, that will become a paste because botanically, the cacao bean is actually a nut. So it’s like with any kind of nut butter. It comes very smooth and rich, and it’s amazing.
So when you have that cacao paste, or what some companies will call cacao liquor, and just the cacao bean without anything added, and so you can take that and do a couple of things with it.
Either you can, at that point, add your sweetener. We use primarily coconut sugar, which is a wonderful low-glycemic sweetener from coconut flower.
DEBRA: I’m going to stop you right there, in mid-sentence, because we need to go to break. And when we come back, we’ll hear the rest of the story.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. And my guest today is Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate. And wait until you taste this chocolate. It tastes totally different than anything you’ve evertasted.
But we’ll be right back and hear more about the story of chocolate.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, and my guest today is Chocolate Girl, Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate. And you can go to her website at GnosisChocolate.com. That’s G-N-O-S-I-S chocolate.
Vanessa, before you go on with your story, tell us what Gnosis means.
VANESSA BARG: Gnosis is actually a Greek word which means knowledge. And in modern day English, it means knowledge of the heart and intuitive knowledge, experienced knowledge, that wisdom that you learn over the course of your life through your trials and your tribulations.
When I started the company, I thought that was such a powerful word for today’s time because we can learn so much from our experiences, and then to open our hearts, and bring that to the world. And so that was perfect for a chocolate company.
DEBRA: I think it’s perfect too.
So what happens next in the process of chocolate?
VANESSA BARG: So after you ground the cacao nibs into a smooth paste or liquor, you can take that and you can either put it into, what’s called the butter press. That will eventually press out the sap from the paste.
If you think about having a nut butter, and if you let it sit for a while, the oils will separate out. So that’s what a butter press does. It presses those oils out. And that oil is cacao butter, and it solidifies at room temperature. It’s actually stearic, palmitic and oleic acids.
So rather your unhealthy, saturated fats, these are very healthy saturated fats, the kind that you would find in avocado and walnut and coconut.
So you separate that out, and what you’re left with is cacao powder. And so that powder is just really concentrated cacao solid. It’s where most of the nutrients can be found in a cacao.
If you want to just get a straight shot of all of the nutrients and all the antioxidants in a cacao bean, you could take that cacao powder and it’s really, really important to find cacao powder that is not alkalized. You see that Dutch-processed, and that is that they’ve added toxins to it, and you do not want to have that. It doesn’t taste nearly as good.
And it’s really, really important to find raw cacao powder. And truly raw cacao powder is actually difficult to find because there’s no real definition legally for the use of the word raw. And so there are a lot of companies that are selling “raw cacao powder,” but in that butter-pressing process, the machine often will get above 200-degrees. There’s just so much pressure that is required.
I’ve visited a few different cacao factories to try and find truly raw cacao, and the only one who actually built their own butter press—that you have to really modify the machine quite a bit in order to make sure that it stays under 118-degrees. And the only company who is doing that is actually called Big Tree Farms, and they’re located in Indonesia, in Bali.
It’s an amazing company, truly high-integrity, completely transparent. You can go and you can visit them if you’re ever in Bali. It’s BigTreeFarms.com.
And that is our source for both the coconut sugar, as well as for the truly raw cacao.
And so that’s the process if you want to make raw cacao powder and butter. But if you’re making chocolate and you want to leave the cacao butter in, so that you have that creaminess, you take that cacao paste and just grind in your coconut sugar.
That’s what we do. We’re using coconut sugar, which the nectar that comes from the flowers of the coconut tree. And it is truly the world’s most amazing, sustainable sweetener. It’s low-glycemic, about 35 on the glycemic index. And it has proteins, it has so many minerals, and it’s just amazing.
And the flavor, it’s not like your Stevia, which is another wonderful sweetener that we do use. But the coconut sugar is one-to-one with cane sugar in its sweetness, and has a beautiful maple and caramel flavor.
That’s what we do as we grind in that coconut sugar, and you’re left with the world’s most nutritious chocolate.
DEBRA: I really have to say that of all the sweeteners I’ve ever tried, and I think I’ve tried every sweetener there is, I think that coconut sugar is the most wonderful tasting sugar, and it’s low-glycemic. And it pairs perfectly with chocolate. It adds a richness to the chocolate that white sugar doesn’t.
And I think that that’s part of what gives your chocolate its unique flavor because it has the gentleness of the cacao bean, the raw cacao bean. And then it has that warmth of the coconut sugar.
When I first tasted it, oh, my god.
VANESSA BARG: That’s the best reaction I can ever hope for.
DEBRA: It’s different from any other chocolate because I’ve looked at a lot of chocolates. You have everything from the most toxic chocolate which would be pesticides. It wouldn’t be organic, and it wouldn’t be raw, and it would have refined white sugar in it, and artificial flavors.
And so then what happens is that people go to another step, and they say, “Well, we’re going to make it organic.”
And so it’s made from organic chocolate, organic sugar and organic soy lecithin. And it’s still got stuff in it, but it’s all organic.
And you have taken all those things out. Instead of saying, “I’m going to take things out of the toxic chocolate,” you just started with a bean, and said, “How are we going to make this as close to just the bean as possible and make it palatable and healthy?”
VANESSA BARG: And that’s what taking things out. One of the things that I’m really, really just in love with about cacao is that it is an amazing transport for medicinal herbs because as I mentioned earlier, cacao is a vaso dilator, so it helps with circulation.
What that means is it can help deliver nutrients to your system in a much more fast and efficient way.
So what we do is not only take the things out of chocolate that you find in your conventional bar with, like you said, all these toxins in it, not adding those in. But what we’re actually doing is infusing the chocolate with herbs from traditional Chinese medicine, from ayurvedic medicine, from South
American and Native American medicines.
And so we’re actually infusing this chocolate with things that will be beneficial for your health, not only leaving out the things that are bad for your health.
DEBRA: And we’re going to talk more about that when we come back from the break. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, and my guest today is Chocolate Girl, Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate. That’s GnosisChocolate.com, G-N-O-S-I-S chocolate dot com.
And we’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, and my guest today is Chocolate Girl, Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate. And that’s at GnosisChocolate.com.
So Vanessa, let’s talk about your chocolates. The first thing I want to ask you about is the sweeteners. You have a page here about sweeteners that you use, and I see that you’ve included coconut sugar, which we’ve talked about, and also Stevia, and also agave nectar.
I would like to ask you about agave nectar because it says here that you visited your source of agave, and that you read a report about it. So what did you find?
VANESSA BARG: Back in, I think, 2010, we were using agave nectar. And that was our only sweetener at the time. When I launched the company, there was no chocolate on the marketplace that did not contain sugar, or maltitol, or something synthetic. So this was really the first chocolate on the market that had low-glycemic sweetener.
Agave nectar was the only thing that was available at the time. And it was heralded. Everyone loved it.
And then Dr. Mercola, who has a really, really wide reach, and a really amazing website, and a lot of information that he brings about health and wellness, and a lot of controversial information, he came out with a newsletter that stated that agave nectar is as bad as high fructose corn syrup.
And just that headline alone, it made a lot of ripples across the industry. And of course, once you read something like that, you’re going to doubt your sweetener that everyone was using. It was really exciting for people to have that, and then all of a sudden, it was the devil.
DEBRA: I remember that.
VANESSA BARG: Being a health counselor, I really did not start this company to build a product company. I had no interest in making a lot of profit by having a chocolate company. It was really meant as a tool within my health counseling practice.
And so when I heard that, I said, on learning the truth, if this was the case, then I would either find a new sweetener or stop making chocolate.
There was no way that I was going to use cane sugar, and I certainly wasn’t going to use anything that was as bad as high fructose corn syrup.
Within a matter of days, I went down to Guadalajara, the Jalisco region in Mexico, which is where most agave comes from. I went down there and took part in the entire process from the farm, where I harvested pina, and took that agave plant through the entire process, where they removed the water, and heated it at an actually very low temperature, but at high pressure, so that the water would evaporate out of the agave nectar, leaving a syrup without heating it above 118-degrees.
And they did not add any of the toxins that Dr. Mercola had spoken of in this newsletter. And we did a whole lot of testing on that final product. And the only reason why we continue to use it in some of our products is because I know that our specific source is very, very high integrity.
So I wrote a report about this, probably six pages long. It’s got photos on it, and it’s called The Agave Report. If you search for that, you’ll find a lot of really interesting information.
DEBRA: It’s right here at the bottom of the page, yes.
When I started recommending agave—some years ago, I had a blog that was just about sweeteners because at that time, these were all these new natural sweeteners coming on the market, and agave was one of them. The description of agave was that it was the sap of this plant, and cooked down like maple syrup. And it was great.
It’s great to use agave. It’s such a good alternative to sugar, in terms of using it and how it tastes. It was like maple syrup except it was a different plant. That sounded fine to me.
And then all this other information started going around, and I was trying to find out, did that apply to all agave? Was it only certain agave? Were things being mislabeled? Were they being processed differently?
And it’s such a good idea, but I never ended up getting the answers. I didn’t get on a plane and go down and check out all the agave plants. I didn’t have funding to do that.
So all I had to go on was what other people said. So I’m glad to hear this from you. I know that you’re talking about your specific agave, and not all agave. But I do think that agave is a viable idea. We just need to make sure that the agaves we’re purchasing, whichever ones they are, actually are produced the way yours are produced.
VANESSA BARG: Exactly. And I think that when you really look at what the complaints are about the agave nectar and the high amount of fructose in it, you immediately start to think of the high fructose corn syrup toxin because it really is incredibly toxic.
But then if we all realize like, “Oh, fructose can be found in all fruits and in most vegetables.” It is a natural substance.
And so it’s just about moderating how much you’re using. Some people do eat all fruit. There are people who are fruitarians. But if you’re putting a little bit of agave nectar in a bar of chocolate, then you have all that fiber and you have the rest of the product.
We’re not talking about guzzling a bottle of agave nectar, but you really wouldn’t want to do that with any sweetener or any ingredients.
DEBRA: No, you wouldn’t want to do that. But a little bit in context, I think that all concentrated sweeteners that you need to look at how much you’re eating. I know that there are some food blogs where they just put agave in everything like it’s water.
VANESSA BARG: Yes, exactly. And Dr. Mercola did actually revise his statement, and I have a link to that revision where he said, “Well, a little bit is fine.” So if you’re having a tablespoon or two, that’s fine.
It’s very sad actually, having been there and met the farmers. Seeing how much really was invested, and providing for the U.S. market. It was really booming, and then all of a sudden, the support stops. And yes, you can still find agave in a lot of products, but it fell out of grace.
And it’s just really sad to see all of this investment. They really put a lot of hard work into it.
I still do use the agave nectar in some of our products, not many, just because, really, coconut sugar is just so much superior in that it has not only that one-to-one with sugar in the sweetness and the great flavor, but it also is very nutrient-dense.
And that’s one thing that agave doesn’t necessarily have. It has the sweetness and slightly less glycemic than coconut sugar. It’s around 25, 27, whereas coconut sugar has about 35. But really, cane sugar is in the 60’s. So they’re both amazing sweeteners and I really love to use them.
DEBRA: Good. Well, we need to take another break, and when we come back, we want to hear all about your fabulous chocolates. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, and my guest today is Chocolate Girl, Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate, GnosisChocolate.com.
And we’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, and my guest today is Chocolate Girl, Vanessa Barg, founder of Gnosis Chocolate.
Vanessa, where do you want to start talking about your chocolates? I’ve got them all sitting on my desk here.
VANESSA BARG: What do you have sitting down on your desk? We can talk about those.
DEBRA: I have truffles. I have chocolate bars. I have raw trail mix. I have chocolate elixir, which I mix with some grass-fed cream. Oh, my god. It’s so good. And I have this little jar. I didn’t see this on your website, but it’s a little jar of cashew butter with cashew and coconut sugar and coco.
Do you sell this? I didn’t see it on the site. This is so good.
VANESSA BARG: That is actually a brand new product. You’re really the first person to receive that. I’m really excited about it.
Just like we take the cacao beans and grind them with the coconut sugar, we also take nuts like cashews, pecans, walnuts, and we grind those with the coconut sugar to make the most incredible spreads, something that we’re about to launch on the website soon.
People could sign up for our newsletter if they want to learn more about that. We’ll be launching it in a couple of days. I’m really, really excited about those.
For breakfast, a lot of people don’t know what to eat. People used to have toast. What do you spread on it that’s going to be healthy and that doesn’t have sugar because pretty much every […]
DEBRA: There is that famous nut spread that everybody […]
And it’s full of sugar. It’s just full of just processed white sugar.
VANESSA BARG: And other stuff.
DEBRA: So if people are in love with that and want to try something else, your new product is going to be a good thing. Even all the big peanut butter companies are now coming out with their own versions of this, but yours is the healthiest, obviously.
It’s obviously a popular thing.
I’ll tell you that you sent me this box with all these chocolates in it, and that was the first thing I tasted. I looked at the jar, and I went, “Oh, open this.”
VANESSA BARG: It’s really, really good.
DEBRA: Also, tell us about the truffles. Those are featured on your homepage.
VANESSA BARG: The truffles are extraordinary. I think these actually are the world’s only, I believe, raw truffles that have a shell and a different cream filling. And so everything is 100% raw and sweetened with a coconut sugar. And we add medicinal herbs to them.
So the Vitality Truffle Collection is something that we launched in the spring, and we are just closing out for the summer time. When it gets too hot, we stop making them. But we have four different flavors in that truffle collection.
They’re all infused with herbs for detox and for cleansing. So it’s not just the amazingness of a creamy filling and this amazing 70% dark chocolate on the outside. But we’ve actually got functional truffles.
They’re some of my favorite products that we produce. The way we make the cream filling is by using that nut butter.
We make them all through the holidays, so we’ve got a pumpkin spice flavor. We have CinnaPecan truffle. For Valentine’s Day, we do four different flavors. We’ve got passion fruit. We’ve got an aphrodisiac truffle with raspberries.
You can do so much with truffles. You can put a couple of layers. And they’re just incredible. Every single truffles that we make has medicinal herbs in them. So we have some that are good for the immune system.
I try to time it so the flavor and the functionality of the truffle will support your health and wellbeing and vitality through each season.
DEBRA: Excellent idea. And I noticed when I bit into the truffle, I thought, “Oh, this seems like a nut butter,” but it was so much smoother than nut butter, like if you buy peanut butter, cashew butter or something.
VANESSA BARG: It’s just the amount of time. We’re very, very patient with it. And it takes hours and hours and hours of very slow grinding to get that consistency. And also, rather than using some palm oil, which is really bad for the environment, and to the flora and fauna. Most of it is done in very unsustainable ways. We want to try to avoid palm oil in most cases, or using soy bean oil, or some other weird vegetable oil.
We’re using cacao butter as the oil. So it’s really [good]. It’s amazing.
DEBRA: Instead of biting into a chocolate and having all that super sweet goo come out, it was nice to bite into a chocolate and know that I was getting some nourishment inside. It was just really lovely to do that.
When I eat your chocolate, I feel supported instead of like I’m doing something bad for my body.
VANESSA BARG: And that’s so important.
DEBRA: It is.
VANESSA BARG: When I was first making these, I found that my clients were feeling very guilty about their love for chocolate. And this was six years ago, well, actually seven years ago, when I first started making the chocolate. It was just so sad to see people have this love/hate relationship with themselves.
It’s like, “Oh, I’m going to indulge in something but feel bad about it.”
And that dynamic really is unhealthy in our society.
And I think that one of the best things about making really functional, healthy, nourishing chocolate is that it changes that dynamic in our minds as to what it means to be healthy and to indulge ourselves. I found that they could be joyous and really enjoy their healthy diet. It was so freeing for them.
DEBRA: It is because good health actually should be a pleasure. It shouldn’t be deprivation. It should be a pleasure.
And in nature, nature makes all these wonderful fruits and flowers and all these things that are just a pleasure to use. And it makes things that are bad for us. It tastes bad.
Our industrial culture has changed that because now, we have this idea that industrially-processed food tastes good instead of the food that actually tastes good.
It’s like our signals are crossed.
But your products really bring that back. And that it has all these good things in it, and it tastes good. And it’s a pleasure to do something that help support a—so we’ve only got a few minutes left, so I want to make sure that you mention your trail mix. Tell us about the trail mix.
VANESSA BARG: Our love our trail mixes. They are so unique. There’s nothing like them on the market. They’re the only trail mixes that contain raw chocolate. I mean, […], chocolate is always the best part.
So we’ve got Superfoods. We’ve got Power Choc Trail Mix which contains really unpasteurized almonds. It has hempseeds in there. We have goji berries, which are a complete protein. So that really is focused around protein-rich foods.
The Power Choc is one of my favorites. We have Fleur De Sel salt in it, in the chocolate. So it’s this beautiful balance on your tongue between savory and sweet. So that’s our Fleur De Sel bar that is in the Power Choc Trail Mix […] protein.
And then we have our Immunity Trail Mix which is quite unique in that it has persimmons, pecans, black currants, pumpkin seeds, and our Simplicity chocolate, which is just our pure 70% chocolate. That one is very high in vitamins A and C, and has lots of zinc in it. That’s why it’s called our Immunity Trail Mix.
I love them both. It’s just so great to be able to put something in my bag and have my chocolate breaks at the same time. It’s really nourishing myself with the nuts and the seeds and the fruits. I love our trail mixes. It’s so great […]
DEBRA: Tell us about your chocolate bars.
VANESSA BARG: So the chocolate bars are definitely our bestsellers, and they are found in about 300 stores around the world. 12 are available in stores, but on our website, we have over 20 different flavors available.
I’ll just talk about my personal favorite. Don’t tell the other ones I said that though. It’s the SuperChoc bar. The SuperChoc has goji berries, raspberries, a base of 70% dark chocolate, and medicinal herbs that are called adaptogens.
Adaptogenic herbs are incredible. You should definitely look them up and try to include as many adaptogens in your diet as you can. Things like maca root and goji berries are adaptogens. And it has Reishi mushrooms, and all of these amazing herbs to help balance your hormonal system and just be maximum vibrant, and help in vitality.
So the SuperChoc is definitely our number one bestseller, my personal favorite.
The whole line of chocolate bars, some of them have medicinal herbs and superfoods. Some of them don’t. We have just the cool mint flavor. We have hazelnuts. We’ve got a deeply dark 90%. And we just go all over the math.
And I think that most people find something that is reminiscent of the chocolates that they used to it that had all the toxins and unhealthy ingredients in it. But this one just springs a whole other level to their love for chocolate.
I’m more than excited to offer all of your listeners a little coupon code. It’s TOXICFREE10, with no spaces. It can be lower case or capital,
TOXICFREE10. That will take 10% off of your entire order as long as you’re ordering $30 or more.
That coupon code will be available, I think, Debra, you said you’d post it on your site.
DEBRA: Yes. So how long…?
VANESSA BARG: I can keep extending it for you. I’m more than happy to do it.
DEBRA: That’s great.
VANESSA BARG: I really love what you’re doing. I’m so, so honored to be on your show. Thank you so very, very much.
DEBRA: Thank you. I know that people will be listening to this show off into the future. And they will appreciate still having this available.
Well, we’ve only got 30 seconds, 25 seconds left, So I’m just going to not ask you another question and just say thank you so much for being here.
Thank you so much for everything that you’re making and the viewpoint that you have. It’s a pleasure. It’s a pleasure.
VANESSA BARG: It’s an honor. Thank you so much for empowering people with this information. Thank you.
DEBRA: You’re welcome. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. Be well.
How Toxic is Your Hair Salon?
My guest today is Will Simpson, Business Development Manager for Green Circle Salons. We’ll be talking about toxic chemicals you are being exposed to in hair salons, what salons can do to be less toxic, and what you can do to reduce your own exposure as a consumer of salon services. Will is a member of Green Circle Salons, one of the fastest growing environmental movements in North America. With a background in customer service and finance, Will joined Toronto-based Green Circle Salons in 2010. Over the subsequent years, the movement has grown across Canada and into the US, with Will at the helm of customer relations. Green Circle Salons has now achieved an industry-wide presence through its diverse partnerships with salon professionals, manufacturers, and policy makers. Will’s career has been equal parts service and strategy, incorporating unique marketing and business development solutions to create a green space inside of the consumer driven salon/spa industry. Will currently lives in Toronto, where he works within the community to embrace the possibilities of a wholly sustainable lifestyle. www.greencirclesalons.ca
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
How Toxic is Your Hair Salon
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Will Simpson
Date of Broadcast: June 04, 2014
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and this is Toxic Free Talk Radio, where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world and live toxic-free. Now, this is a toxic world so how are we going to live toxic-free? It’s about the decisions that you make about reducing your exposure to toxic chemicals, about removing toxic chemicals from your body. When you do that, you can create your own little piece of the world that is so significantly less toxic than the rest of the world. It makes a huge improvement in your health and your well-being and length of your life and having healthy babies, all those kinds of things that are affected by toxic chemicals. That’s what I mean when I say toxic-free, it’s about you making those decisions for yourself that can result in a toxic-free life for you.
It is Wednesday, June 4th 2014. I’m here in Clearwater, Florida and today we’re going to go on a little outing to the beauty salon. My guest today is from an organization called Green Circle Salons which is actually in Canada but they now have presence all over the United States. What they do is they actually have a little program to help salons reduce their toxic waste. What we’re going to talk about today, what are you going to encounter in terms of toxic exposures when you go to beauty salons and what you can do to be less toxic when you get those hair services.
My guest is Will Simpson, he’s the business development manager for Green Circle Salons and he’s coming to us from Toronto, Canada. Hi Will!
WILL SIMPSON: Hi Debra, thanks so much for having me.
DEBRA: You’re welcome. So tell us about Green Circle Salons, what was the thing that made this organization in the first place?
WILL SIMPSON: Sure. Green Circle Salon started back in 2009, it was launched here in Toronto, Ontario. It was really started because we realized that there is no industry-wide solution for the hundreds of thousands of kilograms of waste that were being dumped down the drain or put into landfill every year. It was essentially started as an industry-wide movement that would enable salons to take responsibilities for all of these wastes being created but also enable the salon guest to ultimately, certainly feel good about the choices they were making in regards to their own beauty services.
DEBRA: So the founders made the decision and put the program together and then you’ve been getting together with salon professionals and manufacturers and policy makers and tell us what happened since the founding.
WILL SIMPSON: Yes, so we started with about 30 salons here in Toronto in 2009. We’ve done double digit growth, month after month ever since then because it’s something that really wants people to hear about. They think that “wow, it’s fantastic”, it’s something that a lot of people know the industry is needed for a long time. Both consumers and salon professionals tell us that all the time because it’s something that—it’s a very visual industry and the ways of being created itself is also very visual.
WILL SIMPSON: Anyway we started in 2009 with 30 salons and the next year we were up to about a hundred salons ad since then we’ve launched here in Canada, we’ve launched in Tibet, British Colombia, Alberta and just recently in Chicago as well. So now we are actually able to service salons all across North America through our program.
DEBRA: That’s really great, so how did you personally get interested in this?’
WILL SIMPSON: I became involved in it because I actually grew up in a sort of green space just North of Toronto and it was very interesting. In my childhood, I actually lived right in an area called the Oak Ridges Moraine and I noticed over time, over about a decade, a lot of painted turtles and frogs in my backyard started to disappear. I’ve always thought that was pretty bizarre. It was an interesting environmental phenomenon that I really can’t put my finger on. That sort of created—it sparked an interest in me, in the ecology.
WILL SIMPSON: Over time, as I grew up, that interest grew from an interest in the ecology to economics in ecology. What does it mean? That some people are making big money from, ignoring environmental consequences and others are making money from creating new environmental solutions and looking for ways that we could be doing business in a better way.
WILL SIMPSON: That informed my personal growth and the direction that I took career-wise, until I ended up with this fantastic team, helping out this industry with their needs.
DEBRA: Well, let’s talk about the industry. I know that you have a program where you’re helping salons safely dispose of their toxic hazardous waste, so where in a salon—is there this waste that needs to be carefully disposed of?
WILL SIMPSON: That’s a good question. Our answer is that we treat the salon as an ecosystem.
DEBRA: Good answer! I love that!
WILL SIMPSON: It’s not just the stuff that’s been going on your head as a salon guest but it’s also the light bulbs up in the ceiling, down to the chemicals that are being used on the floor and everything in between. We believe that this all really does is inform the guest experience as well as the experience the staff members are having, and the owners are having. If you spend decades in salon as a lot of you people do, over that time if you’re making healthy choices that’s really going to help with the longevity of your career. If you’re making unhealthy choices, that’s going to help you age you pre-maturely. So to give you a more solid answer, we tried to—
DEBRA: Give us some details about, like different kinds of products and what kinds of toxic chemicals that are in them, especially the ones that you’re interested in controlling to your program?
WILL SIMPSON: Sure, we don’t think of a—
DEBRA: I’m going to interrupt you in a few minutes because we need to go to break but take all the time you need for this.
WILL SIMPSON: Okay, sure. We don’t really get involved in telling salons which products to use. The reason for that is because, ultimately the salon professional is an artist. It’s like Picasso, what they express unto you. Ultimately, it’s not going to have a good result. What can we do is if they’re looking for suggestions on which products to use, we can certainly point them in the right direction but our focus is on managing the downstream impact of the ways that being created. To answer your question, the product—
DEBRA: Before you do that, I just want to [inaudible 7:1] for our listeners that there is the toxic chemicals that are being created by the use of the products. There are some ways that comes from—to far has just been going to the waste stream when it shouldn’t be. What they’re doing at Green Circle Salon’s program is managing that waste in a responsible way where the salon owners may or may not be controlling the production of it, right?
WILL SIMPSON: Exactly.
DEBRA: So that’s a really, really good thing to do. There’s another completely different step of salons and consumers making a choice to be less toxic on the front end. I just wanted to make sure that it’s clear that those are two separate steps and both valid things to do.
WILL SIMPSON: Absolutely. What we do in our company is we help salons by managing about 85% of the waste that is being generated in the salon. That’s everything from the paper and plastics that’s coming in the form of the product bottles and the sugar materials all the way down to the chemical waste that’s left over after the beauty service. So in terms of the toxins that we’re seeing, obviously the most common ones with the perm solutions, the straighteners solutions, the hair dye, the chemicals that are going on the scalp. We’re seeing all different types of products from all different manufacturers but one of the trends that we’re seeing is that people are, that over the last five years or so, there’s been a real emergence of greener products.
DEBRA: I need to stop you right there because we need to go to break and we’ll continue after. This is Toxic-Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest is Will Simpson. He’s from Green Circle Salons that are helping salons reduce their toxic wastes. We’ll talk more about that, the chemicals that you might be exposed to at the salon when we come back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Will Simpson, business development manager for Green Circle Salons. They started out in Canada but they are now coming over to the United States to help salons manage their toxic hazardous waste. So Will, you were telling us—we’re starting to talk about the toxic chemicals in hair products that are used for hair salon services. So let’s start with that.
WILL SIMPSON: There’s a real shift in the late 70s, early 80s in terms of the chemicals that were being used in hair dyes. The reason for that is because they founded the intermediate [inaudible 10:44] which are the chemicals that react with the pigment. At that time, we’re were actually—they were using cancer-causing agents. What they did was that they have been conducting [inaudible 10:59] people who were getting their hair dyed before the early 80s were at the higher risk of developing Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. They basically banned certain substances from being used as toppers in this chemicals, were in this chemical compound but in the process, scientists have been able to get around this bands and create chemical compounds that will react in the same way and they were just derivative of those original. That’s the fancy way of saying the hair dye that was being used 30 or 40 years ago hasn’t really changed all that much because ones the interactions take place they end up forming other compounds that are still known to be potentially carcinogenic.
WILL SIMPSON: There’s still a lot of debates and controversy over whether or not hair dye itself can cause cancer but what they do know is that in this one industry there is an increased risk of bladder cancer. This has been documented in a lot of different studies and they found that ultimately salon professionals do have a high risk of bladder cancer. For that reason, they’re continuing to do studies to bloodstream when they get their hair colored.
DEBRA: Right, of course secondly, being exposed to as much as the salon would care but still, we don’t want our salon workers to be exposed to toxic chemicals s that we could be beautiful. So, what are some other products that have toxic chemicals in them which we should be aware of?
WILL SIMPSON: The main products would be the hair dye itself but all chemicals that are being used can include cancer-causing agents. The main thing that we see are what are known as cold-heart derivative, PPD, that’s p-phenylene diamine. This is the number one ingredient in a lot of hair dyes and this is one of the number one chemicals of the most wanted list because of what it’s been known to be linked to leukemia, bladder cancer and again, Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. This is really the one that people are the most worried about. Formaldehyde is a big one in any of the smoothing treatment and perm solution. Any of those keratin Brazilian blow out type treatment that became so popular in the last couple of decades, these are often linked with formaldehyde.
WILL SIMPSON: Similarly, shampoos and conditioners are known to include sodium laurate or sodium laurate sulfate which is basically have a big question mark around it. Ultimately, a lot of these chemical compounds are still—the jury is not really out yet because they’re still doing research determining exactly where and how it’s affecting women. We do know in a lot of cases, a lot of different studies it’s affecting mammals and aquatic life in really significant way.
DEBRA: One of the things I learned many, many years ago is that there can be similar effect when they test chemicals they test them one at a time in a laboratory and usually on animals or so. They take the mice and take them so much and determine what is the safe level before the mice die. We’re not exposed to toxic chemicals one by one in real life but what we’re exposed to is a lot of toxic chemicals. There’s been many, many studies which show that if you take one toxic chemical and are exposed to another one that they both become more toxic, even just two.
So they say, if you smoke for example, exposure to asbestos is more toxic than if you don’t smoke. I remember the very person I ever saw this concept was 30 years ago when I was studying about combining food additives like a preservative and artificial color and artificial flavor. Separately, they test with them and all the test animals were fine, there was absolutely no effect. Then they started combining them and two of them made the animals ill and three of them made the animals die.
When you go to a salon, it’s not just one chemical, it’s formaldehyde that does something with the hair dye and also things like, one that I’ve written about is something called PVP, polyvinyl pyrolidone, which is in virtually every kind of hairspray.
There was a study, this was many, many years ago, a study where they found that workers in salon have lung diseases because of the PVP that they were inhaling all day long as they were spraying hairspray on people’s hair. That PVP is still in when in a lot of the natural ones but people go to the supermarket and buy hairspray. You can just go down on the aisle and look and on the back you just look on the ingredients; it says PVP, PDP, DVP and one after another. There are all these chemicals that are in a mix in the salon.
We need to go to break in about 20 seconds so I’m not going to ask you another question. Then when we come back, I want to hear about what your program is doing in order to handle these chemicals and how does these minimize our exposure to them and help them not go into the environment. You’re listening to Toxic-Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Will Simpson from Green Circle Salons. We’re talking about toxic exposures in hair salons. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic-Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Will Simpson, Business Development Manager from Green Circle Salon. Now Will, what is your solution for all this toxic chemicals?
WILL SIMPSON: Actually, before we talk about that, I just want to talk about something you mentioned earlier which was the idea that when chemicals get combined they could create a new reaction. I just wanted to mention that a study has been recently conducted in the UK and found out that tobacco smoke and exhaust fumes can actually exacerbate the effects of some of these salon chemicals. Putting clearly, the amines, p-phenylenediamine. PVDs that are found in most hair dyes, this is a common thing that they will create a secondary amine, this again can damage for weeks, months, or even years and ultimately, when it’s combined with secondary agents like tobacco smoke or exhaust fumes that can actually create poisonous chemicals called nitrosamine.
DEBRA: So, you can go into a salon and these chemicals could be floating around in the air, they get on your skin and then you go home and you smoke a cigarette, it can turn to another chemical.
WILL SIMPSON: Absolutely, if you actually look at the material for some of these products they say something like avoid smoking or doing anything in a non-ventilated area while these chemicals are around and the reason is because as we said, it will create a new reaction that compels the effects of these chemicals.
DEBRA: The part I didn’t know was that it stays on your skin and then on a later date, it could combine and create a new chemical. That just makes—I just have to make a deep breath because there’s so many chemicals that we’re being exposed to on time but then to also know that we’re carrying them around on our skin and in the future, they could become more toxic, that’s a whole new danger.
WILL SIMPSON: Exactly, and that is because there are actually different types of hair dyes. So there’s temporary, semi-permanent and there’s permanent. Temporary and semi-permanent, they actually just color the actual hair, whereas permanent dye is changing the chemistry of the hair and that actually stays in the follicle. That’s why these chemicals can penetrate the skin, scalp and also satay inside the hair for a length of time
DEBRA: Wow. Okay so, what are you doing? Tell me about your program.
WILL SIMPSON: Our program is waste production strategy that involves 95% of the products in the salon. Maybe most importantly the chemical waste but it’s also the hair clippings, the foil, the color tubes, the aerosol can, it’s the paper and plastic that 90% of the salons are able to recycle. It’s light bulbs, it’s all the recyclable, broken tools that salons use, it’s glass, it’s essentially everything that’s being brought into the salon on a day to day basis in order for them to run the business.
DEBRA: So then, what do you do? How does the program—do you collect it or what? How does this program work?
WILL SIMPSON: Salons get involve because obviously they see a value in what we’re doing and they want to eliminate their footprints. We do have a couple of different initiative that they can be involved with depending on where they’re located and what recycling services they have after disposal. It’s a three-part system; it’s reducing, recycling and repurposing.
WILL SIMPSON: The reducing is educating the salon about different opportunities to help their salon be more efficient in terms of their water usage, their energy efficiency. The recycling strategy is you take knowledge of the materials that can be shredded and ultimately repurposed like paper and plastic which can turn into post-consumer material, or metal which is melted down and turned into other aluminum products. Then there’s the repurposing element which is taking things like hair and the chemical waste which have no traditional value in the recycling spectrum and giving them a new life.
WILL SIMPSON: It’s a common knowledge now that hair can be used to soak up oil after oil spill. Our company got involved in 2010 after the BP oil spill by shipping our entire inventory of hair to the Gulf of Mexico and [inaudible 22:53] in that shipment, of course. So the volunteers could create oil bins on site that were used to keep the oil from coming up unto the shoreline.
DEBRA: Oh, I didn’t know that at all.
WILL SIMPSON: Well, it’s something that was a little known fact until the BP oil spill, but it actually, the idea originated back when [inaudible 23:14] still happened. Stylists from Alabama was listening and watching it on TV and saw an otter swim by and they notice that the fur or the coat of the otter was actually soaking up the oil. The interesting thing about hair as oppose to the other materials is that an oil company would normally use in their cleanup effort is that the oil actually binds to the hair follicle and the water is repelled. Whereas, if you’re using cotton or another typical absorbent fiber material, what will happen is basically it will act as a sponge and absorb everything and then over time everything will begin to leak out again.
WILL SIMPSON: The hair actually binds to—the oil binds to the hair follicle, what that means is when you take that back on to land, it will actually act as a solid way of transporting all of that liquid crude oil. It can then be put to a train car or any other transportation method and it can be sent to a facility where it could then be expressed, all of that oil can be claimed and the hair bun itself can be used in time and time again.
DEBRA: Wow! That’s very interesting. I have no idea. So then, what do you do with the chemical waste?
WILL SIMPSON: The chemical wastes, that’s the trickiest one for a salon to manage and the reason for that is because it’s not only the most expensive element of their business but it’s also the one that they have the least control over in terms of what staffs are wasting on a day to day basis. We implanted this strategy where there’s a system that they will use for all of their excess chemicals. Right now, we can’t get what’s being rinsed out of the hair but we do have plans to create a system for that in the future.
WILL SIMPSON: In the meantime, it’s a system that could basically make use of all the excess chemical left in the bowl which is usually one to two ounces per service. All of that chemical goes into a storage container, we would pick that container up and that gets processed by a chemical waste treatment company, which will, depending on what they find on each batch, that they will either incinerate it or they’ll neutralize it.
DEBRA: We need to take a break and we’ll talk about this when we come back. You’re listening to Toxic-Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, my guest today is Will Simpson from the Green Circle Salons. We’re talking about how to—what’s going on with those chemicals in beauty salons and how they can manage the waste better. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic-Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, my guest today is Will Simpson from the Green Circle Salons. Their website is greencirclesalons.ca because they are in Canada, Greencirclesalons.ca, if you want to find out more about their program, if you want to tell your hairdresser abou t their program. Right now, they’re in Chicago, US but they are looking to expand all over. There’s no harm in letting your salons know about this.
DEBRA: So now, you were telling us about the, what you do with the toxic chemical waste and so you take the toxic chemicals that are left in the sink and it goes into a storage container then you pick those up. Is there anything else you do with toxic chemicals? Hello?
WILL SIMPSON: A chemical waste company—
DEBRA: I’m sorry. There’s was a gap in the audio, could you repeat that?
WILL SIMPSON: Sure, so the chemicals get picked up by a toxic waste chemical treatment company and depending on what they find when they analyze each batch, they’ll either be neutralized or they’ll be incinerated. The interesting thing about the incineration process is it’s a closed lit system which actually allows these chemicals which would otherwise be going back to our water system and polluting them and polluting aquatic life, it actually creates an opportunity for us to use it as a wasted energy application.
WILL SIMPSON: Just as some other companies in Europe are now beginning to incinerate or gasify garbage to create electricity. This is actually a way to create electricity with the by-product of salon wastes. What it’s doing is actually creating an opportunity to power our homes in our life and ultimately, our blow driers as well due to the chemical waste collection program.
DEBRA: Well, that’s very good idea. What about the toxic chemicals that are polluting around in the air? Did you do anything for that?
WILL SIMPSON: What we do there is, again, we approach them as ecosystem so we believe that the light needs to be salon quality light but also need to be energy efficient life because this will ultimately help the salon to minimize its environmental footprint and also to more provable over time. The cleaning products should be free of all this chemicals and toxins that we’re talking about. The hair product ultimately, if they can, they should be looking for that. At every level we should be trying to do this. One of the big thing that we stress is air and water purification systems. More pure water actually creates a better end product in the hair service, it creates softer hair, it creates a more radiant hair. Similarly, the air quality in the salon is, if the salon continuous to use toxic products such as perm solution which has that ducky smell, it’s really important that they have some kind of system to pull the VOCs, the volatile organic compounds out of the air. We do offer solutions for all of our salons in the form of some great partners across Canada and the US who can actually offer these type of systems for a salon.
DEBRA: I think that’s a really good idea because even if I’ve been doing this for more than 30 years and I know if you’re looking at toxics in the field of toxics, first thing is reduce the poison at the source. If somebody is exposed to a toxic chemical and they are being poisoned, the first thing you do is take them away from the whatever is the source of exposure is. I’m always saying reduce at the source but in a situation like the beauty salon where they are using toxic chemicals and using a lot of them and if they decide that they need to continue to use those and they don’t go the more organic products then at the very least that they should do is have an air filter. You should be able to go to a beauty salon and not get exposure to toxic chemicals even if they’re being used. The other people are just standing around and also the workers should have that protection of removing those toxic chemicals from the air. We’re happy to hear that if salons are not switching to toxic-free products, that at least they have the option there to use an air filter.
WILL SIMPSON: Absolutely, and we really do believe that this is something that ultimately would become mandated by different government bodies because like you said, it’s not just the health of the salon guest but it’s also the people who are working for decades in this industry as an employee or as an owner. It’s very important that you’re putting all of the safe guards in place to work in a healthy environment. We really think that along with the waste production managers that healthier water quality are going to be very important parts in this industry in the future.
DEBRA: Well, particularly too, you go into a hair salon but they also offer nail services and that’s so toxic, the nail polish remover and the nail polish. When I go, I know that my welcome here has a nail salon and you can smell that all the way down to the hallway. You don’t have to be in a nail salon to smell all those chemicals and you should be able to go into hair salon and get your hair services without being exposed to those toxic nail polish, chemicals which is a whole new different thing. We already talked about that exemptions. We did a whole hour on nail polish. That’s something that needs to be considered when you go to a hair salon.
DEBRA: I know here in Clearwater, Florida, I fell to a salon where there are no toxic chemicals in the salon because the owner has decided to only use organic products and I think that’s wonderful. I can actually sit in the salon and it’s like sitting in my own living room. Hopefully, more salons will go to that direction as well.
WILL SIMPSON: Absolutely. This is something like what I said about earlier in the show, we found that this is an emerging trend. You can really trace this evolution across different industries where people are asking for healthier, greener, more sustainable business practices, specifically, in personal care field in terms of the food and products we’re consuming whether it’s topically or internally, people are looking or healthier options.
WILL SIMPSON: These green salon phenomenon is something that is popping up all over and it’s not distinct to anyone, region or country, it’s really something that should happened in a global level. What we found which is really interesting, is that a lot of this manufacturers are starting to pick up on that so they’re creating greener products for salons to use and it’s something where it began with paragons and sulfates, two of them are most wanted kinds of chemicals but certainly, there are brands that are really trying to do things all natural as best as they can.
WILL SIMPSON: The challenge of course with this is that anytime you’re using a “natural” products, it usually means it’s naturally derived or containing natural ingredients. So, often times, it’s actually just a spinoff of another chemical. What we found is there is TDF, toluene-diamine sulfate and that is considered as a safer alternative to the PPD that we were talking about earlier. It still can be problematic and can still create allergic reactions but it’s that trend that we move towards better and safer alternatives to these chemical compounds.
DEBRA: I think that’s a process that certainly there are more choices today than there were 30 years ago or 40 years ago or even 20 years ago, actually even 10 years ago. I would say that it’s accelerating in terms of how many new products that are coming out and there are so many new products that I can hardly keep tract with them. There’s also different degrees of products that are more or less toxic.
DEBRA: People need to make changes and well, if they’re willing to make a change. I remember there was a time when I had found a perfect shade of red lipstick and then I found out about toxic chemicals shortly. I need to get rid of this lipstick but I so didn’t want to because I was so attached to this red lipstick. But ultimately, it became more important to me not to expose myself to the lead and all the other things that are in red lipstick. After a period of time, there were actually red lipstick that were introduced, it’s actually a lip gloss, it’s not quite a lipstick, but it had that same shade of red and I was able to be happy with the colors and glosses that I could get and I didn’t have to hold on to those old ideas. I think that as time goes by change has happened. That we’re increasingly are being better and better and less toxic and less toxic products. It’s happening and every different industry.
DEBRA: I’m very happy to hear that hair salons are getting less toxic and it sounds like a good program that you have. We just have half a minute, is there any closing word you’d like to give?
WILL SIMPSON: I think it’s just important to people ask salon professionally what are you doing to get onboard with this. Not only because it’s a trend that will help them to stay competitive but also because ultimately, it’s their health on the line and it’s the health of the salon professionals as well who’s working in that industry. There are few things you can do but you can always ask your salon for their MFDF sheet, they can take a look of what products they are using.
DEBRA: Good idea.
WILL SIMPSON: You can ask them to—
DEBRA: I’m sorry I have to cut you off, thank you so much Will. You’re listening to Toxic-Free Talk Radio, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd, be well.
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Listen to Gnosis Chocolate founder Vanessa Barg on Toxic Free Talk Radio |
CocoVia
CocoVia wholefood supplements give you all the benefits of eating chocolate, without the calories, fat, or sugar (of course, without the pleasure of eating chocolate too!). They use their own patented Cocapro process to guarantee the highest concentration of cocoa flavanols in a dietary supplement. “Cocoa flavanols are the beneficial phytonutrients (also known as plant-based nutrients) found naturally in cocoa, and no other food on Earth can match cocoa’s unique blend of flavanols. That’s why experts refer to the cocoa bean as nature’s most surprising ‘superfruit.’ When consumed daily, cocoa flavanols are scientifically proven to help support healthy circulation†, which is important for overall health as well as cardiovascular health, cognitive health, skin health, blood flow and exercise performance” You can also use this unsweetened powder in recipes that are provided on the site.
Taza Chocolate
Stone ground, organic, fair trade chocolate. “We stone grind organic cacao beans into perfectly unrefined, minimally processed chocolate with bold flavor and texture, unlike anything you have ever tasted.” High percentage cacao 95%, 87%, 80%…this is seriously bittersweet. Chocolate discs, chocolate covered treats and a lot more.
Theo Chocolate
“The first Organic and Fair Trade fair for Life Bean-to-Bar Chocolate Factory in North America…Since 2006, we’ve been making the highest quality chocolate from the world’s best cocoa beans, grown in the most sustainable ways possible.” All organic ingredients, including organic sugar. Chocolate bars with unusual flavors, caramels, confections, gift boxes.
Chocolate Bar Database
2008 chocolate bars, representing 473 chocolate makers, and counting, all indexed by name, maker, ingredients, origin, and organic, milk, no soy, and more. Most contain sugar, some contain soy, and other things you might want to watch out for, but this is such a good resource to help you find the chocolate that is right for you, or to find the ingredients of a brand of chocolate you are wondering about. Debbie and Vic have tasted all these chocolates, with a pile of wrappers for proof.
Videri Chocolate Factory
I was walking down the street in Raleigh, North Carolina and happened to find this chocolate factory that makes wonderful, simple chocolate bars with all organic ingredients. Though these chocolate bars contain sugar, I’m including them because they are otherwise free from any artificial ingredients. Organic fair trade cocoa, real vanilla beans…”No soy lecithin, no xanthan gum, no emulsifiers or artificial flavorings. Just whole, organic and fair-trade ingredients.” The handful of flavors are delicious: a good dark chocolate, a milk chocolate that’s 50% cacao, and then dark chocolate with sea salt and another with pink peppercorns. That’s it. Simple. Organic. Chocolate.
Which Face Mask Will Filter Cigarette Smoke?
Question from Pam
Hello,
I am asking which air mask would be best for filtering out cigarettes. My grandmother is a chain smoker and a hoarder. When we have to go over to her house to do something the cigarettes overwhelm us. I end up with a migraine and my mother ends up with bronchitis. This happens ever single time. We have tried the face masks that doctors wear, and while they help, it’s not great.
We can’t stop going over to her house as we are her major support and she refuses to stop smoking. (she also does not believe that smoking is bad for you but that is another issue!) However, we really do not want to get sick. Do you have any suggestions?
Thank You
-Pam
Debra’s Answer
I went to the I Can Breathe! website at www.icanbreathe.com and they recommend their Honeycomb Mask with Classic Coconut Activated Carbon Filter.
They have a number of different masks for various purposes and explain which pollutants are removed by each.