Labels

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Heinz Beef with Broth babyfood vs Thrive Cooked Roast Beef babyfood



(there are other Thrive freeze dried meats, but this is the only one that I have on hand at this time)

Appearance:
Heinz babyfood separated during storage so it had layers of fat, liquid and pink/brown stuff. Once stirred, it still looked pinky/brown with a very gooey-looking texture to it.
Thrive babyfood had the same color as cooked meat.

Ingredients:
Heinz contains beef, beef broth, concentrated lemon juice
Thrive contains freeze dried cooked beef, salt
(I cannot equally compare the nutritional facts as Heinz has it's servings in mL and Thrive has servings in grams)

Packaging:
Heinz has a glass jar (which is good) but a lid that has a BPA lining (BPA would leach into the food)
Thrive cans are coated with food grade enamel

Source of meat:
Heinz: completely unknown...and the pinkish hue is making me think of all those bad pink slime articles/movies that are out there.
Thrive: roast beef from cows in USA, certified gluten free, non GMO, no added hormones, no antibiotics

Shelf Life:
Heinz - sealed shelf life of 2-3 years; opened shelf life of 1-2 days in the refrigerator
Thrive - sealed shelf life of 25 years; opened shelf life of 1 year in the pantry.

Taste:
Heinz: oh-my-gosh...give me strength...I tried the tiniest little amount and it really didn't taste like meat...it was *not* good at all.
Thrive: a bit salty, but definitely meat.

Price (current at January 2014) .... since the serving sizes are in completely different units of measurement (mL vs g), I am going to compare rough estimates of equivalent servings based on protein content.

Heinz: paid $1.69 for 1 small jar (yesterday) with 13g of protein per serving

Thrive: Roast Beef is on sale this month (January), and the Q price (which you would pay by contacting me directly) for a pantry can is $18.59US, where the pantry can contains 7 servings where each serving contains 23 g of protein. Rough estimate... let's say that the pantry can contains 12 servings, which would make it roughly equivalent to the amount of protein in Heinz. Based on that, one "revised serving size" of babyfood would be $1.54US per serving.
If you purchased a #10 can for $45.79, with 22 servings of 1/2 cup, or 41 "revised serving size" of babyfood, your cost per serving would be $1.12US per serving


Summary:

Heinz beef with broth
- had to be stirred to blend layers
- smell quite...strong...the word putrid comes to mind
- was pinky/brown in color
- had a globby texture to it
- jar lid contains BPA; some BPA leaching into food
- unknown source of meat
- unknown country of origin
- unknown GMO status
- unknown gluten free status
- "no added salt or modified starch"
- price per serving = $1.69

Thrive cooked roast beef
- had to grind freeze dried food to a powder and add water/broth
- smells like meat... can't say it any other way
- was brown in color
- looked like meat...had a fibrous texture, like that of actual meat (because it is real meat)
- container enamel lined; no possibility of chemical leaching
- USA meat source
- non GMO
- gluten free
- has salt added
- price per serving of babyfood = $1.54US from a pantry can or $1.12US from a #10 can

Hope you have enjoyed my comparison! I would be more than happy to come to your house and show you how easy it is to make babyfood from Thrive. Just send me a msg and we can set up a date.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

to make babyfood out of Thrive freeze dried food:
1. put desired amount of dry freeze dried food/dehydrated food into a clean coffee grinder,
2. grind to desired powder consistency,
3. pour powder into serving bowl,
4. add warm, room temperature, or cold water to the powder, a teaspoon at a time, mixing as you go, until you achieve desired consistency


All Thrive fruits, vegetables, and meats can be made into babyfood following this same procedure.  View all of the meat products here:
https://shanna.thrivelife.com/all-products/thrive-foods/meats-beans.html

No comments:

Post a Comment