Hot Cross Buns
by Arnie's
Contains 6 flagged ingredients
Hot Cross Buns by Arnie's receives a safety score of 0/100 based on ingredient analysis using FDA Substances Added to Food (SAFFA) data and CSPI Chemical Cuisine ratings. The product contains 6 ingredients that have been flagged for potential safety concerns by regulatory or consumer advocacy databases. Product label data is sourced from the OpenFoodFacts collaborative database. See the full ingredient breakdown and safety assessment below.
What the Data Says About
Hot Cross Buns by Arnie's carries a composite safety score of 0/100, which we classify as "Avoid" on our four-tier shelf-label framework. The score is computed by mapping each labeled ingredient against FDA Substances Added to Food (SAFFA) regulatory status and CSPI Chemical Cuisine classifications, then penalizing the overall product for each additive rated as caution-or-worse. Product data originates from the OpenFoodFacts collaborative catalog; safety annotations come from federal regulators and the Center for Science in the Public Interest.
Our scan identified 6 flagged ingredients in this product — components that at least one official source has classified as requiring caution, targeted avoidance, or further evaluation. Flagged ingredients are the items most likely to surface in FDA inspection findings, state-level ingredient bans, or outbreak-related recall notices, so the per-ingredient breakdown below is the most useful lens for anyone screening this product for a specific dietary concern.
On the NOVA processing scale, Hot Cross Buns is classified as Group 4 (Ultra-processed). NOVA measures industrial processing intensity rather than ingredient-level safety, so it complements the SAFFA and CSPI ratings: a product can be clean on additive flags but heavily processed, or lightly processed but carry individually flagged ingredients. Combining both lenses gives a fuller picture than either alone. The Nutri-Score grade of D reflects nutritional balance — calories, saturated fat, sugar, sodium versus fiber, protein, and produce content — which again is a distinct dimension from additive safety and worth weighing alongside the scores above.
Safety Profile at a Glance
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| PlainFoodSafe Score | 0/100 | FDA SAFFA + CSPI composite |
| Flagged ingredients | 6 | CSPI/FDA review |
| NOVA processing group | Group 4 | OpenFoodFacts |
| Nutri-Score | D | OpenFoodFacts |
Composite metric derived from FDA SAFFA, CSPI Chemical Cuisine, OpenFoodFacts. See methodology.
Ingredient Safety Analysis
Full Ingredient List
Enriched wheat flour (wheat flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), raisins, water, corn syrup, high fructose corn syrup, sugar, food starch-modified partially hydrogenated vegetable oil (soybean and/or cottonseed oil, mono and diglycerides), salt, orange peel, citron, cherries, pineapple, whole eggs, yeast, contains 2% or less of: milk protein concentrate, non-fat dry milk, lactose, apricot concentrate, sodium benzoate, sorbic acid, and potassium sorbate (preservatives), beet fiber, corn starch, sodium bicarbonate, anhydrous sodium aluminum sulfate, monocalcium phosphate, invert sugar, nutmeg, corn syrup solids, calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, dextrose, agar, locust bean gum, sodium hexametaphosphate, locust bean gum, margarine (partially hydrogenated soybean oil, water, partially hydrogenated cottonseed oil, salt, mono - and diglycerides, colored with annatto/turmeric, calcium edta added as a preservative, artificial flavor, vitamin a palmitate added), agar agar, titanium dioxide (as color), propylene glycol, xanthan gum, phosphoric acid, natural and artificial flavor, polysorbate 80, glycerin, caramel color, yellow 6, citric acid, red 40, yellow 5, sulfur dioxide.
Categories
Data Sources
Data as of 2025. Source: OpenFoodFacts, FDA SAFFA, CSPI Chemical Cuisine.
Product data from OpenFoodFacts (ODbL). Ingredient safety ratings from FDA SAFFA and CSPI Chemical Cuisine. See our methodology for details.
This information is for reference only and does not constitute dietary or medical advice.