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Coconut savoury sauce - Less salty than soy sauce
Coconut aminos dressing is similar to soy sauce, but it's less salty and has a mild flavour. Use to add umami flavour to Asian dishes.
Organic Coconut Aminos - 250ml - RAWGORILLA
RAWGORILLA
Coconut savoury sauce - Less salty than soy sauce
Coconut aminos dressing is similar to soy sauce, but it's less salty and has a mild flavour. Use to add umami flavour to Asian dishes.

Delicious Greek summer flavours on your table! Juicy sweet tomatoes, crunchy cucumber, fresh peppers, spicy onion and delicious olives. It's a healthier version of a classic Greek recipe - we swapped the feta with tofu! Very easy and quick to make - serve it with a slice of sourdough bread.

Grilling pineapple changes it completely. The heat caramelises the natural sugars, so you get sticky golden edges and a hint of smoke, while a brush of coconut oil keeps it from catching and a squeeze of lime cuts through the sweetness. It's vegan with no added sugar. Serve it warm off the grill, spooned over coconut yoghurt or on its own after a barbecue.

Creamy and delicious! Perfect for dessert or breakfast. This is rice pudding, but not as you remember it from school dinners. We’ve swapped the traditional dairy for silky coconut milk and added a bright, citrusy lift with orange and a warming hit of cinnamon.

This creamy and delicious spread can be enjoyed with crackers, fresh veggies, and toasts.

These no-bake energy bites are easy to make, full of feel-good ingredients, and very delicious!

In the world of health and nutrition, the "Organic" label is often treated as a magic wand. We are told that organic is always better, always safer, and always worth the premium price tag. But at Whole Food Earth, we prefer honesty over marketing slogans. The truth is more nuanced. 1. What Does "Organic" Actually Guarantee? To understand the value, we first have to strip away the myths. In the UK, organic certification strictly regulates how a food is grown and processed. No Synthetic Pesticides: This is the big one. Organic farming prohibits the use of most synthetic herbicides (like glyphosate) and pesticides. No Artificial Fertilisers: Instead of chemical sprays, organic farmers use compost, manure, and crop rotation to feed the soil. Non-GMO: Organic standards strictly forbid the use of Genetically Modified Organisms. No "Stealth" Additives: Organic processing bans the use of controversial additives like Sulphur Dioxide (E220)—the chemical used to bleach conventional dried fruits. 2. When Organic Truly Matters (The "High-Impact" Foods) If you are looking to prioritise your organic budget, focus on foods that are "high-absorption" or heavily sprayed in conventional farming. The "Sulphur" Factor in Dried Fruits This is where Whole Food Earth takes a stand. Conventional dried fruits—like apricots and figs—are almost always treated with sulphur to keep them bright and "pretty." Organic certification bans this. When you buy our Organic Sun-Dried Figs, you are getting fruit cured by the sun, free from the respiratory irritants found in sulphured alternatives. Cacao and Superfoods Products like Organic Cacao Powder and Maca Powder are often grown in delicate ecosystems. Organic sourcing here isn't just about your health; it’s about the soil. Organic cacao farming encourages agroforestry (growing trees among other plants), which protects tropical biodiversity and ensures the beans aren't soaking up synthetic fertilisers. 3. When the Label Isn't Everything Is conventional food "poison"? No. And is organic food always "perfect"? Not necessarily. Here is the balanced view: The "Small Farmer" Gap: Many incredible traditional farmers in regions like Portugal or Turkey follow organic principles—they use no chemicals and dry their fruit in the sun—but they cannot afford the expensive paperwork for "Official Certification." At Whole Food Earth, our "Sourcing Revolution" involves finding these high-integrity "conventional" gems that are as clean as organic but more accessible in price. Nutritional Density: Science is still debating whether an organic apple has significantly more Vitamin C than a conventional one. The real difference is often in the Phytochemicals—plants grown without pesticides often develop stronger natural antioxidants to protect themselves. The "Processed" Trap: An organic biscuit is still a biscuit. Don't let the organic label distract you from the ingredient list. Unprocessed is always a higher priority than Organic. 4. The Environmental Impact: Soil is Soul The real reason to go organic often has nothing to do with the calorie count. It’s about Soil Health. Conventional farming can lead to soil depletion, where the earth becomes a sterile medium that only grows food because it's being "fed" chemicals. Organic farming treats the soil as a living organism. Healthy soil traps more carbon, holds more water, and produces food with a more complex "Terroir"—that deep, earthy flavour you can actually taste in our Organic Cacao Liquor Buttons. 5. How to Shop Smart at Whole Food Earth We provide both Organic and high-quality Conventional options because we believe in informed choice. Go Organic for: Leafy superfood powders, cacao, and any dried fruit where you want to avoid sulphur (E220). Go Conventional for: Items with thick natural skins or products from our trusted traditional growers. The Verdict: Integrity Over Labels At the end of the day, the best diet is one built on Whole, Unprocessed Foods. Whether it carries an organic seal or is a meticulously vetted conventional product from our shop, the goal is the same: getting you closer to the earth and further from the factory. Explore our full range of Organic and Natural staples today and decide what matters most for your kitchen.

Where are olives from? There are over 800 million olive trees planted worldwide. There are more olive trees and people in Greece. It is estimated over 170 million trees are planted in Greece, while the population is only about 10.4 million people. The average life of an olive tree is between 300 and 600 years. One of the oldest olive trees in the world is on the island of Crete in Greece. It is about 4,000 years old and is still producing olives. People who live in southern European countries like Italy, Greece or Portugal consume olives and extra virgin olive oil every day. Why olives have different colours? Olives are considered fruits from the olive tree. They can be distinguish by colour, size and shape. The olives get their colour from the moment they are picked from the tree. The olive tree always gives green olives and then they change the colour as the mature, so they become darker and softer. The colours may vary from light purple to dark purple and black. All the green olives that stay on the tree will eventually become black. Most of the olives are picked green as they are less bitter and contain more oil. Why olives have different sizes? The size of an olive depend on the variety. You will see the final shape of the fruit when the ripening period approaches. Some varieties provide fruits that are very large (even 6 times larger than the small ones) like the Sicilian variety Castelvetrano and some are just always very small like other Italian varieties Casaliva and Taggiasche. The large size olives varieties with a sweet flavour are more popular as healthy snacks. Why are olives so crucial in the Mediterranean diet? Olives are a food of an amazing nutritional value. Olives are considered fatty fruits, but 70% of this fat is healthy monounsaturated fat. Olives are packed with nutrients and have lots of health benefits: Rich in antioxidants Rich in vitamins Cholesterol-free Source of healthy mono-saturated fats Low calorie Low in saturated fats The vitamins and antioxidants found in olives may provide essential health benefits. Olives are a great source of vitamin E, which can improve skin health and help your immune system. Some studies have shown that olives may protect against osteoporosis, in which bones weaken.

Where is olive oil from? Liquid gold - that's what Homer used to call olive oil in Ancient Greece. Olive oil has always been the most important ingredient of a healthy Mediterranean diet. Olive trees have grown for thousands of years around the Mediterranean Sea in Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal. With hot and dry summers, the local climate of these countries is perfect for these resilient trees. Today, Greece is the biggest consumer of olive oil per capita (20l annually), following Italy (13l). Spain is the biggest producer of olive oil. However, Greece and Portugal produce olive oil of the best quality - the premium extra virgin olive oil with a rich, fruity aroma and less acidic flavour. How is olive oil made? Made from the fruits of the olive tree, olive oil is technically a juice. Harvesting takes place once a year, early in autumn, when the olives are fresh and at their best quality with low acidity levels. Then they are the most nutritious and contain the most antioxidants. The olives are crushed just like any other fruits. Olive oil, just like any juice, is best when it's cold pressed and fresh, and this is what we call extra virgin. What is extra virgin olive oil? Extra virgin olive oil is purely extracted from cold-pressed olives, and it's not blended with other oils. Non-extra virgin olive oil may include both cold-pressed and processed oils. Extra virgin olive oil means there were no chemicals used in the process of extracting the oil. When oil is cold-pressed, it means it was not heated over 27 °C during the production. This kind of olive oil contains more nutrients and vitamins. Why is extra virgin oil healthy? In recent years, the popularity of olive oil as a healthy ingredient has been growing, and many families around the world have a bottle of it in a kitchen cupboard. The fatty acid (oleic acid) in olive oil is mainly monounsaturated fat (73% while14% of the oil is saturated fat, and 11% is polyunsaturated). Olive oil contains omega-6, omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins E and K and lots of antioxidants which protect our cells from free radicals. The oleic acid can help reduce inflammation and have great effects on genes linked to cancer, minimising the risk of chronic diseases such as heart disease. Consuming olive oil is also not linked to weight gain. How to cook with olive oil? Although you can use it in many healthy recipes, including for sauténing and frying, olive oil loses some of its beneficial properties when cooked or warmed up. The best is to use olive oil for uncooked recipes such as salads, dressings and dips or just drizzle it on top of all kinds of dishes for a finishing touch. You can now buy Greek extra virgin olive oil at Wholefood Earth and enjoy the goodness of this liquid gold. Browse our collection of healthy oils! From hemp seed oil and flax seed oil to organic coconut oil, you will find a perfect option for your cooking and baking.

Many of us took this year’s Working From Home stint to reflect on what we really want and need in our homes. Many started DIY projects. Others moved to a house with a garden. And everyone was suddenly really conscious about what they had in their pantries, cupboards and freezers. The mass-hoarding that happened at the start of the first lockdown was difficult to navigate, but thankfully there are a lot of ways to store emergency food supplies that would have prevented any worry. Here we’ll give you a list of nutritious foods that are easy to store for a long time. Grains and Flours Storing Grains is easy. Grains like bulgur, brown rice, spelt and barley keep well for months in an airtight container and are a great base for most meals. They are also great additives to vegan or gluten-free diets as many grains do not contain gluten but do contain a whole host of other nutrients to enrich a diet with. Flours, made from grains or things like almonds or soy, also keep really well in a pantry. In a clean, airtight container, they will last for several months. Flour is great to have in stock at all times; those times you crave some late-night pancakes? With flour in your house, you can whip some up in minutes! (Dried) Fruit We all need plenty of fruit in our diets. It contains many healthy vitamins and minerals and fibres. One of the notorious disadvantages of fruit is how quickly fruit goes off, and it is generally not seen as a food great for storage. How wrong we all were. There are so many varieties of dried fruit nowadays, that you never again need to worry about not having fruit in your pantry. Why not stock up on some delicious dried banana chips or goji berries? They are great toppings for oatmeal, yoghurt, and desserts, contain tons of vitamins, and last for ages in your storage cupboard! Another option is to can your fruits. It is a relatively easy process that requires a pot for boiling water, a jar (repurposed sauce jars are great), and an acidic component such as vinegar. Once the fruit is canned, it lasts months. Herbs and Spices Having a good spice rack is like having a good boiler; they are sure to improve your life for years to come. A broad selection of spices in your kitchen allows for experimental cooking, discovering new recipes, or just upgrading your current meals. As spices are dried plants, they will last for ages when stored right. Any airtight container will do just fine. And the added bonus is that herbs and spices can make even the plainest food extraordinary. Oils and Vinegar Oils such as olive oil and coconut oil are great to use for cooking and other health and beauty uses, and last for a year or longer when stored right. Generally, oil should be stored in a closed container, and kept in a cool, dry place. This is why they make a great pantry food to stock up on when you can. Vinegar or apple cider vinegar is also great for storing for long periods of time. They also should be kept in a dark, dry place. The great thing about vinegars is that they can be used to prolong the life of other foods such as fruits (see the Fruit section) or vegetables, are great for cleaning and can be used for dressings and sauces. Beans Dried beans or canned beans are both great to add to your pantry. Canned or dried they have a long shelf life at room temperature, they are a great source of protein, contain a lot of other essential nutrients, and are very filling when put in a meal. When you have dried beans, just make sure to store them in a cool, dry place, as getting them wet will shorten their shelf-life. As an added benefit, dried beans are also incredibly cheap, and super versatile. Seeds Seeds are a pantry staple. Seeds can be kept for months in a dry and dark place, preferably in an airtight container. They are great little boosts of nutrients and make great toppings for desserts, smoothie bowls, or oatmeal. Pumpkin seeds are also a great nibble on their own. If you are thinking of using all of that lovely flour you now keep in storage for some home-made bread-baking, why not use sesame seeds or poppy seeds to give your bread some extra texture and flavour? Why Should You Start Storing Foods? It is oftentimes not only time-consuming to go to the grocery store, but it can also get quite expensive. Oftentimes, buying in bulk works out much cheaper than buying little amounts every time. If you have a healthy pantry with a nice variety of products, you will always have a base for a meal on hand. You could also start your meal-prepping journey at the same time as building a food-storage. Meal prepping often works out much cheaper per meal than cooking every evening and is much less time-consuming, leaving you with more time to enjoy the little things in life. If you feel inspired by our blogs, why not sign up to our newsletter here? We will soon announce our brand-new recipe blog with loads of healthy, wholesome recipes to help you use some of the products in these blogs.

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.

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.















