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Organic. Vegan.
Organic Atlantic Agar Flakes - Sea Vegetable Gelling Agent - 30g - Clearspring
Clearspring
Organic. Vegan.

Summer cake - soft, buttery cake base, a tart raspberry centre and a sweet, buttery streusel crumb topping.

Forget the thin, airy supermarket slice—this is a "proper" loaf with some real backbone. Our Wholemeal Rye Seeded Bread is dense, earthy, and packed with a satisfyingly nutty crunch from a blend of toasted seeds.

Move over, water biscuits. These Golden Flaxseed Crackers are the crunchy, herb-flecked upgrade your cheeseboard has been waiting for. Fragrant with woody rosemary and finished with a proper kick of cracked black pepper, they’re light, nutty, and—dangerously—moreish.

It’s the ultimate tea-time companion—wonderfully moist, subtly spiced, and packed with soft, jammy chunks of orchard fruit. Whether you’re using up a garden glut or just fancy a bit of rustic comfort, this cake is a guaranteed crowd-pleaser that’s as simple to bake as it is to eat. It’s a slice of pure nostalgia that never goes out of style.

Move over, processed snack bars. These flapjacks are a structural masterpiece of unrefined oats, seeds, and nuts. No "magic powders" or industrial syrups here—just a rich fibre matrix and essential fats to keep you properly fuelled. It’s real food you can actually chew, designed to kill the mid-afternoon slump without the sugar crash.

Easy, tasty, fluffy vegan banana muffins - a perfect Easter treat.

In the world of 2026 e-commerce, a new word is taking over the UK health and wellness industry: the Prosumer. At Whole Food Earth, we’ve noticed a shift. You aren’t just looking for a bag of snacks to tide you over until dinner; you are looking for the raw building blocks to create something better. You are moving away from being a passive buyer and becoming an active participant in your food chain. But what exactly is a Prosumer, and why is this "Producer-Consumer" hybrid the key to solving the UK’s Food Literacy Crisis? What is a Prosumer? The term "Prosumer" is a blend of Producer and Consumer. Traditionally, these two roles were completely separate: the producer made the food in a factory, and the consumer simply bought it. In 2026, the lines have blurred. A Prosumer is a person who: Produces their own meals, snacks, and even skincare from scratch. Consumes only high-quality, traceable, unprocessed foods and raw ingredients. Instead of buying a processed, plastic-wrapped loaf of bread, a UK Prosumer buys Organic Spelt Flour and Active Dry Yeast to produce their own sourdough. Instead of buying a "fortified" cereal, they buy Organic Jumbo Oats and Organic Hemp Seeds to produce a nutrient-dense breakfast. Why the Prosumer is the Future of the UK Pantry The UK currently has one of the highest consumptions of Ultra-Processed Foods (UPFs) in Europe. This has led to a gap in our knowledge—we've forgotten how food is actually made. Empowering the Prosumer is our way of helping you take that power back. 1. Total Control Over Your Food When you are the producer, you decide exactly what goes into your body. There are no hidden emulsifiers, no "natural flavourings" that aren't actually natural, and no excessive refined sugars. You control what you eat and the natural structure of nutrients that your body thrives on. 2. Technical Transparency & UK Standards A Prosumer doesn't just trust a pretty label or a "Best Seller" badge on a marketplace. They want the data. That’s why at Whole Food Earth, we make our Technical Data Sheets and Analysis available to you. Whether it’s heavy metal testing or SALSA-certified hygiene reports from our warehouse, we provide the information you need to be a confident producer and consumer. 3. Radical Value for UK Households With the cost of living still a major factor in 2026, buying raw ingredients in bulk—like our 5kg or 25kg sacks—is a great financial decision. Also, our range of budget-friendly pantry staples Stock & Prep is designed for family daily cooking and meal prep. By producing your own staples, you are cutting out the "middleman" costs of marketing, fancy packaging, and industrial processing. You get more nutrients for every pound spent. How to Step into the Prosumer Role Becoming a Prosumer isn't about having a professional kitchen or a degree in science. It’s about a change in mindset. Next time you’re in a supermarket, ask yourself: "Could I make this myself with three raw ingredients?" Usually, the answer is yes. Trust, but Verify: Use our website to look at the specific data. Cook More, Enjoy It, and Don't Panic: This is the golden rule. Don't let the technical side overwhelm you. The joy of being a producer is the sensory experience—the smell of fresh grains, the texture of seeds, and the pride of a meal made from scratch. The Whole Food Earth Mission We don't want to just be another shop on your browser. We want to be your partner in production. By providing batch-tested, organic staples, we are giving you the infrastructure to leave the cycle of processed convenience behind. You are no longer just a consumer. You are a producer. Welcome to the UK food revolution. Explore our Organic Pantry Whole Foods and discover the building blocks of a better life.

In 2026, the UK is facing a quiet but devastating epidemic. It isn’t a new virus or a sudden shortage; it is a Food Literacy Crisis. Have we forgotten how to eat? Despite being a nation of "foodies" with a booming market for health supplements and artisan sourdough, the average British consumer is more disconnected from their food source than ever before. New reports from early 2026 reveal that while 90% of parents agree food education is a vital life skill, only 22% believe children today can actually cook a basic meal from fresh ingredients. At Whole Food Earth, we believe that transparency isn't just about showing you a lab report; it’s about giving you the tools to understand why that report matters. Here is the reality of the UK’s food literacy gap and how we can close it together. What is the "Food Literacy Crisis"? Food literacy is more than just knowing "apples are healthy." It is a four-dimensional skill set: Nutrition Knowledge: Understanding what a body actually needs (and what a "Bliss Point" is). Food Skills: The practical ability to turn a raw ingredient, like Cacao Nibs or Organic Almonds into a nutritious meal or drink. Critical Evaluation: The ability to see through "Health Halo" marketing and "Zombie Brand" tactics. Food Interaction: Understanding the impact of your food choices on the planet and local food systems. Why is the UK Falling Behind? The crisis isn't happening because people are "lazy." It is a structural failure. As of March 2026, several factors have combined to create a "perfect storm" of food illiteracy: 1. The Curriculum Gap While the UK government has recently moved to rename "Cooking and Nutrition" to "Food and Nutrition" in schools, it is still not a standalone core subject. Access to food education has become a "postcode lottery." Children in lower-income households are 24% less likely to receive practical food education than their more affluent peers. We are raising a generation that gains independence at 18 without knowing how to read a technical specification sheet for the fuel they put in their bodies. 2. The Rise of "Digital Misinformation" In 2026, nearly 1 in 5 young people use social media as their primary source of nutritional advice. This has led to the rise of "Influencer Science," where a 30-second video with high-end lighting carries more weight than a peer-reviewed study. When consumers lack the "basics," they are easily led by myths, fad diets, and expensive "zombie" brands that prioritise aesthetic over actual purity. 3. The Complexity of 2026 Food Standards With the recent UK-EU SPS realignment, food standards are changing rapidly. Between new rules on PFAS in packaging and updated heavy metal limits in cacao, the "average" consumer is overwhelmed. When information is too complex, the human brain reverts to the easiest option: Ultra-Processed Foods (UPFs). How Whole Food Earth is Changing the Narrative We don't want you to just "buy" our products; we want you to understand them. We are fighting the literacy crisis by offering Full Transparency and Active Education. The Technical: If you can read the technical specification or a heavy metal report, you can never be "fooled" by any tricky brand again. Empowering the Prosumer (Producer and Consumer): We provide the raw building blocks—Cocoa Butter, Cacao Mass, and Organic Grains—and teach you the "why" behind them. Promoting Food Sovereignty: By supporting independent, SALSA-certified whole food suppliers, we help reconnect the UK consumer with the actual people and warehouses behind their food. The Goal: A Literate UK Pantry A food-literate consumer is a "dangerous" consumer to the big conglomerates. They are someone who: Asks for the Certificate of Analysis (CoA). Knows that OF&G Organic is just as rigorous as the Soil Association. Understands that a 1kg bulk bag of raw ingredients is cheaper and healthier than a week's worth of processed snacks. The Final Tip: The "Joy of the Kitchen" Rule Cook more, enjoy the process, and—most importantly—don’t panic. Food literacy isn't about achieving laboratory perfection in your home kitchen. It isn’t about counting every milligram of a mineral or obsessing over every line of a lab report. Those tools are there to give you peace of mind, not to cause "orthorexia" or food anxiety. The ultimate goal of knowing your ingredients is to return to the simplest, oldest health hack in history: The Home-Cooked Meal. Cook More: When you take raw Cacao Powder or Organic Flour and turn them into a brownie you are the one in control. You are the "Quality Control Manager" of your own life. Enjoy It: Cooking is one of the few times in a digital day where we use all five senses. Smell the richness of the cacao, feel the texture of the grains, and taste the difference that purity makes. Don't Panic: If you eat a processed snack at a friend's house or grab a quick sandwich on a busy Tuesday, the world won't end. Food literacy is about the big picture. True food literacy is the bridge between the science of the lab and the soul of the kitchen. Use the data to protect yourself, but use the ingredients to nourish yourself. When you start with pure, transparent building blocks from Whole Food Earth, you can stop worrying about the 'hidden' nasties and start enjoying the art of eating again. Are you ready to graduate from a consumer to an expert? Start by checking out the Technical Info tab on your favourite product. The more you know, the better you eat.

A major review published in late 2025 put ultra-processed food back in the headlines. A series of papers in The Lancet, drawing on more than a hundred long-term studies, concluded that diets high in ultra-processed food are linked to harm across every major organ system in the body. One of the researchers called it a "seismic" threat to public health. Here is what the study found, what it does and does not prove, and what it means for how you eat. First, what counts as ultra-processed? Not all processing is bad. Freezing vegetables, milling flour, drying fruit, these are processing too, and they are fine. Ultra-processed food is a specific category: industrially made products built largely from substances you would not find in a home kitchen, things like protein isolates, modified starches, emulsifiers, artificial sweeteners, colours and flavourings. Think packaged snacks and crisps, fizzy drinks, most breakfast cereals, ready meals, mass-produced bread and a lot of "diet" and protein bars. The giveaway is usually a long ingredients list full of names you do not recognise. This matters because ultra-processed food is now the bulk of what many of us eat. In both the UK and US, more than half of the average person's daily calories come from it. What the study actually found This was not one small experiment. Forty-three scientists from six continents spent years reviewing more than 100 long-term studies covering close to 10 million people. Across that evidence they found ultra-processed food linked to more than 30 negative health outcomes, spread across the whole body: Heart and circulation: higher risk of heart disease and stroke. Metabolism: higher risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Liver: links to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Brain and mood: associations with anxiety, depression and even Parkinson's disease. Other systems: links to certain cancers, kidney problems and early death. Of the 104 long-term studies they examined, 92 reported a higher risk of one or more chronic conditions. A separate US analysis went further still, tying ultra-processed food to more than 124,000 preventable deaths over a two-year period. An honest word about what this proves It is worth being straight about the science. Most of this research is observational, which means it shows a strong and consistent association between eating a lot of ultra-processed food and getting ill, but it cannot prove that the food is the sole cause. People who eat more ultra-processed food often differ in other ways too. That said, when this many studies, across this many people, all point the same direction, the pattern is hard to wave away. The researchers were clear that the weight of evidence now justifies treating ultra-processed food as a serious public health issue, not a fad worry. So what do you actually do about it? The encouraging part is that the fix is not complicated or expensive. You do not need a perfect diet or a cupboard full of supplements. You just need to shift the balance towards food that has had less done to it. A few simple moves: Read the ingredients, not the health claims on the front. A short list of recognisable ingredients is a good sign. Lean on single-ingredient staples: oats, rice, lentils, beans, nuts, seeds, fruit and vegetables, plain yoghurt. Cook a little more from scratch. It does not have to be elaborate; a pot of porridge or a tray of roast veg counts. Be wary of products that market themselves as healthy. Plenty of "high-protein" and "low-sugar" snacks are still ultra-processed. Make swaps, not sacrifices. Trade the flavoured cereal for oats and fruit, the snack bar for nuts, the fizzy drink for sparkling water. Whole Food Earth Approach This is the thinking behind everything we stock: real, single-ingredient food with nothing hidden in it. Our range is built around exactly the kind of staples this research points you towards, organic grains, seeds, nuts, pulses, fruit and plant powders that are simply the food itself, dried or milled and nothing more. You can read every ingredient because there is usually only one. Eating well does not mean eating joylessly; it mostly means eating food that still looks like food. The latest science is a useful nudge rather than a reason to panic. Crowd your plate with simple, whole ingredients, keep the heavily processed stuff as the occasional treat it was always meant to be, and your whole body, every organ of it, stands to benefit. Note: This article summarises published research for general information and is not medical advice. If you have specific health concerns, please speak to a qualified professional.

High-protein has moved from the gym bag to the menu board. Customers want protein in their muffins, their morning oats, their grab-and-go bars, and they want it without dairy. If you run a bakery, a cafe, or a food production line, a good plant protein powder is a simple way to add that without reworking your whole recipe book. Here are five single-ingredient, organic powders, what each one does in real food, and how to buy them in volume. What to look for in a baking protein Three things matter once you start cooking with protein powder rather than just shaking it in water. Density tells you how much actual protein you are adding per gram, which matters when you are making a nutrition claim on a label. Flavour decides whether the powder disappears into the recipe or takes it over. And behaviour in the bowl matters most of all, because protein powder absorbs liquid and changes texture, so you usually swap it in for a portion of the flour rather than adding it on top. A safe starting point is to replace 10 to 20 percent of the flour by weight, then add a little extra liquid or fat to keep the crumb soft. Test, taste, adjust. 1. Organic Pea Protein, 85 percent The workhorse for food production. At 85 percent protein it lets you make a strong nutrition claim with the smallest amount of powder, and its neutral, slightly earthy flavour blends into both sweet and savoury formulas. It is the natural base for high-protein breads, bars and even plant-based meat alternatives. Because it is so concentrated, go gently on the substitution rate and watch your hydration, as it will dry a mix out faster than the lower-density seed proteins. 2. Organic Rice Protein, 80 percent Smooth, fine and mildly sweet, brown rice protein has a soft texture that suits lighter, fruitier bakes and works well in cafe smoothies and overnight oats. On its own it is a little low in lysine, but paired with pea protein it gives a complete amino acid profile, which is the trick for vegan products that need to stand up nutritionally. Easy to digest, which is a selling point worth putting on the menu. 3. Organic Pumpkin Seed Protein, 60 percent This one brings character. Cold milled from pumpkin seeds, it has a deep, nutty flavour that shines in darker, heartier products, think seeded loaves, savoury muffins, chocolate or banana bakes, and energy balls. It also carries natural iron, magnesium and zinc, so it adds genuine nutritional depth you can talk about, not just a protein number. 4. Organic Hemp Seed Protein, 50 percent A complete protein in a single ingredient, with all nine essential amino acids, plus fibre and plant-based omega-3 and omega-6. The earthy, nutty taste is made for rustic, wholesome ranges, wholegrain loaves, flapjacks, oat bakes. Lower density than the isolates, so it is more of a wholefood addition than a pure protein hit, which suits a craft or artisan positioning. 5. Organic Sunflower Seed Protein, 50 percent The allergen-friendly all-rounder. Free from nuts, soya, dairy and gluten, it is the safe choice for schools, nurseries, and any venue catering to allergies. The mild, smooth flavour blends into almost anything, from breads and flapjacks to protein bars, which makes it the most flexible powder here for a broad menu. The formulator's trick: pea plus rice Pea protein is high in lysine but lower in methionine. Brown rice protein is the reverse. Combine them, roughly two parts pea to one part rice, and you get a complete amino acid profile comparable to whey. For any vegan product where you want to claim quality protein, this blend is the industry-standard answer. Menu and product ideas For cafes: protein-boosted overnight oats and porridge, smoothies and shakes, energy balls and protein bites by the till, and a higher-protein muffin or banana bread in the cabinet. For bakeries: seeded protein loaves, flapjacks, protein cookies and bars. For producers: high-protein snack formulations, breakfast products, and plant-based meat alternatives where pea protein does the heavy lifting. Buying in bulk All five are available from 250g pouches for recipe testing right up to bulk sacks for production, so you can trial a product before you commit to volume. Bulk pricing as a guide: Pea and Rice protein in 20kg sacks from around £305 to £317, and Pumpkin, Hemp and Sunflower in 25kg sacks from around £359 to £415. That works out to a low cost per gram of protein, especially for the high-density pea and rice options. Get in touch for trade and wholesale enquiries. Whether you want maximum protein with a neutral taste (pea), a soft texture for lighter bakes (rice), a nutty mineral boost (pumpkin), a wholefood complete protein (hemp), or an allergen-free all-rounder (sunflower), there is a powder here to build a menu around. All five are certified organic and single ingredient, which keeps your own ingredient list clean and your story simple. Always test recipes at scale and check each product's specification and allergen information before using it in commercial production.

Have you ever opened a packet of crisps with the intention of having just a handful, only to find yourself staring at an empty bag ten minutes later? We have all been there. For decades, diet culture has told us that this phenomenon is a personal failing—a lack of willpower or self-control. However, modern nutritional science is painting a very different, much more candid picture. You are not lacking willpower; you are up against a multi-billion-pound food industry. Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) are not just cooked or prepared; they are scientifically engineered in laboratories to be hyper-palatable and, ultimately, addictive. Here is a look behind the curtain at exactly how UPFs are formulated to hijack your brain, override your natural appetites, and keep you coming back for more. 1. The Discovery of the "Bliss Point" Food manufacturers do not just guess how much sugar or salt to put into a product. They employ food scientists to calculate the exact mathematical ratio of ingredients required to hit your "bliss point." The bliss point is the precise balance of sugar, fat, and salt that maximises pleasure and dopamine release in the human brain without overwhelming it. If a food is too sweet, your brain eventually registers that you have had enough and tells you to stop eating. If the sweetness is perfectly balanced with salt and industrial fats, that satiety signal is muted. This holy trinity of ingredients (sugar, salt, and fat) rarely exists together in nature. When your brain encounters them simultaneously in a UPF, it triggers an unnaturally massive dopamine rush, creating a neurochemical reward system that closely mimics the pathways of addiction. 2. Vanishing Caloric Density Have you ever noticed how foods like cheese puffs, highly processed chocolates, or certain crisps seem to literally melt in your mouth? This is a deliberate texturising trick known as "vanishing caloric density." When food melts away instantly, your brain is tricked into thinking you are not actually consuming any calories. The chewing process is bypassed, and the stomach does not receive the physical bulk it expects. Because your brain does not register the food as filling, it delays sending the "I am full" signal, prompting you to keep eating well past the point of your actual caloric needs. 3. The Destruction of the Food Matrix In a whole food, like an apple or a handful of raw almonds, nutrients are bound together in a complex cellular structure called the food matrix. Your body has to work hard to chew and digest these foods, releasing energy slowly and steadily. UPFs completely destroy this matrix through heavy industrial processing (like milling, bleaching, and high-pressure extrusion). The natural fibre is stripped away entirely. The carbohydrates are pre-digested into ultra-fine powders and syrups. When you eat a UPF, there is nothing left for your digestive system to break down. The glucose hits your bloodstream almost instantly, causing a massive blood sugar spike. Predictably, this is followed by a severe blood sugar crash an hour later. That crash triggers intense physical cravings, trapping you in a relentless cycle of eating, crashing, and craving. 4. Flavour Layering and Sensory Specific Satiety Humans are evolutionarily wired to seek out variety. If you eat a large bowl of plain boiled potatoes, your tastebuds will eventually get bored, and you will stop eating. This is called "sensory specific satiety." UPF manufacturers bypass this natural mechanism by using complex, synthetic flavour profiles. They layer artificial flavourings, industrial umami extracts (like yeast extract and MSG), and hidden sweeteners so that the taste is incredibly intense but never quite distinct enough for your brain to tire of it. You keep eating because your palate is constantly stimulated, yet never truly satisfied. UPF Engineering vs. Whole Food Reality To understand just how drastically our food has been altered, look at the difference between how UPFs and whole foods interact with your body: Feature The Ultra-Processed Method The Whole Food Reality Texture Engineered to melt in the mouth (vanishing caloric density) to bypass chewing. Requires active chewing, signalling the brain to prepare for digestion and fullness. Fibre Content Stripped of natural fibre to increase shelf life and speed up consumption. Rich in natural dietary fibre, which expands in the stomach and feeds the gut microbiome. Digestion Speed Pre-digested ingredients cause rapid blood sugar spikes and subsequent crashes. Intact food matrix ensures slow, sustained energy release without extreme insulin spikes. Flavour Artificial flavour layering prevents the brain from feeling satisfied. Simple, natural flavours trigger normal sensory satiety. How to Break the UPFs Cycle Realising that your cravings are the result of industrial engineering, rather than a personal failure, is incredibly empowering. It means you can actively choose to step off the rollercoaster. You cannot out-willpower an entire industry of food scientists, but you can change the playing field entirely. The most effective way to break an addiction to ultra-processed foods is to stop eating foods that require a laboratory to exist. When you transition your diet to single-ingredient, unprocessed foods—like whole organic grains, raw nuts, legumes, and fresh produce—you allow your tastebuds to reset. Without the artificial dopamine hits of the "bliss point," your body's natural hunger and fullness cues will return. Whole foods do not need to trick your brain into wanting them. They provide genuine, honest nourishment that leaves you feeling truly satisfied.

The landscape of the British school canteen is about to change. Following a recent government announcement, widely reported across the UK press, ministers have confirmed a significant crackdown on the quality of food served to our children. High-sugar snacks and deep-fried products are being phased out in an urgent bid to tackle the rising rates of childhood obesity and improve the nation's long-term health. At Whole Food Earth, we believe this shift is more than just a policy change, it is a vital step toward reclaiming the nutritional integrity of the food our children eat every day. What is Changing on the School Menu? The new guidelines are designed to strip away the "empty calories" that have become staples in many school dinners. The key changes include: A Ban on High-Sugar Drinks: Removing sugary sodas and juice drinks that spike blood glucose levels. Limiting Deep-Fried Foods: Restricting items like chips and battered products to no more than twice a week. Reduced Sugar Content: A concerted effort to lower the sugar levels in puddings and snacks served during the school day. While these measures are a positive start, they highlight a larger conversation we've been having in the Whole Food Earth community: the need to move away from Ultra-Processed Foods (UPF) and back to the "Bioavailable Pantry." Why the "Deep-Fried" Era is Ending For decades, convenience has dictated the school menu. Deep-fat frying is fast and cheap, but it often relies on highly refined seed oils that are prone to oxidation and inflammation. When combined with high-sugar snacks, it creates a "craveability" cycle that contributes to childhood obesity and dental decay. By removing these industrial shortcuts, the government is acknowledging what we have always championed: children need real, whole ingredients to thrive. When we replace a deep-fried nugget with a slow-release grain or a sugary drink with pure hydration, we aren't just "cutting calories", we are providing the body with the building blocks it needs for cognitive focus and steady energy. From School Canteen to Home Kitchen: Bridging the Gap The government's initiative is a great baseline, but the real "food revolution" happens in our own pantries. If schools are cutting out the junk, how can we as parents and caregivers reinforce these habits at home? 1. Swap Synthetic Sweeteners for Whole Fruits Instead of processed desserts, use nature's own sweeteners. Our Organic Date Paste or Lucuma Powder offers a low-GI alternative for home baking, providing sweetness alongside essential fibre and minerals. 2. Move Away from Refined Oils If the goal is to avoid the "deep-fryer" trap, look toward healthy fats. Roasting vegetables or proteins in stable fats or using Organic Rapeseed Oil provides flavour without the inflammatory profile of industrial oils. 3. Embrace Nutrient-Dense Staples The best way to fight obesity is to ensure meals are satiating. Incorporating high-protein, high-fibre staples like Quinoa, Red Lentils, or Organic Oats ensures that children stay fuller for longer, reducing the urge to reach for high-sugar snacks between meals. The Whole Food Earth Perspective: Food as an Insurance Policy The government's announcement is a wake-up call for the UK's food system. However, we shouldn't wait for legislation to improve our children's health. By choosing single-ingredient, non-UPF staples, you are creating a "nutritional insurance policy" for your family. Whether it's a teaspoon of Green Kale Powder in a morning smoothie or a batch of home-baked snacks made with Wholemeal Spelt Flour, every small change helps move the needle away from industrial processing and back toward the earth. Are you ready to join the revolution? Explore our Stock & Prep range to find the organic staples you need to build a high-integrity kitchen that goes far beyond the school canteen.











