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Writer's pictureKrystal L. Beers

Beware of Baking Soda


baking soda

By Krystal L. Beers, C.S.A.N.

 

Why beware of harmless baking soda? Several years ago a friend mentioned something about chemicals being in baking soda. I dismissed it thinking she must have meant to say baking powder not soda. We all know there’s aluminum in baking powder.

 

And then I started watching this neat YouTube channel called Off Grid with Doug and Stacy. In one video, Stacy talked about baking soda being produced using chemicals. Really? I just had to find out more.

 

If you’re anything like me and the countless other back-to-nature-types, you use baking soda for a plethora of homemade products from baked goods to facial scrub to laundry soap, and everything in between. Its health benefits are touted far and wide, as a Google search will tell you. And so will Dr. Josh Axe.²

 

CHEMISTRY & HISTORY

What is baking soda anyway? Baking soda is a white crystalline powder (NaHCO 3) better known to chemists as sodium bicarbonate, bicarbonate of soda, sodium hydrogen carbonate, or sodium acid carbonate.

 

It is classified as an acid salt, formed by combining an acid (carbonic) and a base (sodium hydroxide), and it reacts with other chemicals as a mild alkali. At temperatures above 300°F (149°C), baking soda decomposes into sodium carbonate (a more stable substance), water, and carbon dioxide.¹

 

Imported from England, baking soda was first used in America during colonial times, but it was not produced in the United States until 1839. In 1846, Austin Church, a Connecticut physician, and John Dwight, a farmer from Massachusetts, established a factory in New York to manufacture baking soda.

 

The earliest process of manufacturing soda ash (Na 2 CO 3), from which sodium bicarbonate is made was invented by French chemist Nicolas Leblanc. Sodium chloride (table salt) was heated with sulfuric acid, producing sodium sulfate and hydrochloric acid. The sodium sulfate was then heated with coal and limestone to form sodium carbonate, or soda ash.

 

In the late 1800s, another method of producing soda ash was devised by Ernest Solvay, a Belgian chemical engineer. The Solvay method was soon adopted in the United States. In the Solvay process, carbon dioxide and ammonia are passed into a concentrated solution of sodium chloride. Crude sodium bicarbonate precipitates out and is heated to form soda ash, which is then further treated and refined to form sodium bicarbonate.

 

Although this method of producing baking soda ash is widely used, it is problematic because the chemicals used in the process are pollutants and cause disposal problems.

 

An alternative is to refine soda ash from trona ore, a natural deposit. Most baking soda in the U.S. comes from Green River, Wyoming. Green River also supplies a quarter of the world’s baking soda. The baking soda from Wyoming is mined from trona ore. Unfortunately, most often trona ore also gets the chemical treatment.

 

SAFE CHOICES

Not all baking soda today is processed with chemicals! Long before there were laboratories, baking soda existed in nature. It has been used in one form or another for thousands of years.

 

Natural soda is mined directly from the ground in the form of nahcolite. In this form, there are no chemical reactions. Nothing is added or altered. It’s just pure baking soda the way nature made it.

 

There are a couple of brands available online. I use Bob’s Red Mill that a local grocery store agreed to carry. You may have to special order it, but for making your own beauty products and baking, it’s well worth stocking up. Yes, it does cost slightly more than the common brand, but not that much when you consider the health and environmental impact.

 

So buyer beware, that innocent ingredient used in baked goods and homemade beauty and cleaning products can indeed contain harmful chemicals. Be savvy. Know your source!




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Copyright © 2024 Radiant Animal Wellness, Krystal L. Beers. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced in any form without the written consent of the Author/Publisher.

 

Originally written in August 2018 for the Highland Glenn Ranch blog.


 

About the Author: Krystal L. Beers, C.S.A.N. is a board Certified Small Animal Naturopath consulting on animal nutrition and wellness. With years of experience in animal wellness, Krystal is a blogger, writer, and presenter on natural pet care as well as the published author of three animal care books, including Rabbit Care… Naturally, Give Your Dog a Species Appropriate Raw Food Diet, and The Eight Laws of Health in Animal Naturopathy. Krystal’s articles have been featured in various publications in both print and online. Krystal is passionate about using and sharing Young Living Essential Oils. Visit her Website: https://twohunnyz.wixsite.com/rawnaturopathy

 


THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT - Some posts and/or pages on Radiant Animal Wellness may contain affiliate links from which we may receive monetary compensation. There is no added cost to you should you decide to purchase from these links - the cost is the same either way. Krystal & Radiant Animal Wellness thank you for your support!


 

DISCLAIMER: All information contained here on Radiant Animal Wellness is intended for educational purposes only. It is not provided in order to diagnose, prevent, or treat any disease, illness, or injured condition of the body or pets and the author, publisher, and contributors accept no responsibility for such use. The decision to use, or not use, any information is the sole responsibility of the reader. Anyone or their pets suffering from any disease, illness, or injury should consult with their physician or veterinarian. The ONLY essential oils we use and refer to in all of our posts, articles, and books are Young Living Essential Oils. The statements herein have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Krystal L. Beers and Radiant Animal Wellness do not assume any legal responsibility for the misuse of the products discussed.

 

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