Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes carries a safety score of 3/5 and appears in 1 indexed US food products.

Safety score 60.0%

3/5 from FDA SAFFA + CSPI Chemical Cuisine

How common is vs other flagged additives?

Number of indexed products containing each of the most common flagged additives — Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes highlighted.

Indexed products containing each flagged additive. Source: Open Food Facts ingredient lists × FDA SAFFA × CSPI Chemical Cuisine.

Caramel Coloring22612Red 4021595Yellow 518987Carrageenan17853Blue 116643Yellow 613560Sucralose10490Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes1
Indexed products containing each flagged additive. Source: Open Food Facts ingredient lists × FDA SAFFA × CSPI Chemical Cuisine.
Safety Score
3/5

Safety Assessment

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes has a moderate safety profile (3/5). While approved for use, some studies or consumer advocacy groups have raised questions about certain aspects of this ingredient. Consumers who prefer caution may wish to limit intake.

What the Data Says About

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes currently appears in 1 product across the OpenFoodFacts catalog we index, which gives a concrete measure of its footprint on US grocery shelves. Our internal safety score of 3/5 synthesizes FDA Substances Added to Food (SAFFA) regulatory status with the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) Chemical Cuisine classification. These two frameworks capture different questions: regulators ask whether exposure at typical intake is acceptable, while consumer-advocacy groups examine cumulative dietary load and vulnerable-population risk.

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes serves one or more technical functions in food manufacturing — stabilization, flavor, preservation, or structural role — which explains its presence across multiple product categories in our database. Inspection and outbreak records frequently trace back to control failures around functional additives, whether through batch contamination, undisclosed substitutions, or labeling mismatches that trigger recall classifications by the FDA.

No specific concern flags are attached to Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes in our current data snapshot beyond the regulatory and CSPI classifications above. That does not rule out individual sensitivity reactions, and anyone managing allergies, elimination diets, or chronic conditions should verify with a qualified healthcare professional before relying on population-level ratings.

Safety Profile at a Glance

Regulatory and safety classifications for Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes
Source Classification Year
FDA SAFFA Not listed 2024
CSPI Chemical Cuisine Not rated 2024
PlainFoodSafe Score 3/5 2026
Product footprint 1 products OpenFoodFacts

FDA SAFFA database, CSPI Chemical Cuisine ratings, OpenFoodFacts product index. See methodology.

Products Containing

Showing 1 of 1 products

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes safe to eat?

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes has a safety score of 3/5. Always check with a healthcare provider if you have specific dietary concerns.

What products contain Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes?

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes is found in 1 products in our database, spanning various food categories and brands.

What does Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes do in food?

Cover And Reduce Heat To Medium-low And Continue Cooking 15 To 20 Minutes serves various technical functions in food manufacturing and processing.

Where does this ingredient safety data come from?

Safety data comes from the FDA's SAFFA (Substances Added to Food) database, CSPI (Center for Science in the Public Interest) ratings, and the OpenFoodFacts product database. Product counts reflect items cataloged in OpenFoodFacts.