While it’s getting easier to tell what’s really in those packages on  the supermarket shelves — if you care to read the label — those  ingredients can still be pretty confusing. Here in the US, we chow down  on foods that are actually illegal in the European Union and many other  countries. While public outcry over food almost always revolves around health,  politics plays a big role when it comes to deciding whether to ban a  food.
 Milk, Cheese and Ice Cream
 Actually,  Europeans love dairy products and the EU countries together are the  number one dairy producers in the world. Back in 1999, the EU banned  milk and dairy products from cows treated with synthetic growth  hormones, which are also banned in Japan, New Zealand, Australia and  Canada. Since 1993, the Food and Drug Administration has maintained that the  hormones, which make cows produce more milk, pose no threat to humans.  The FDA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the National Institute  of Health all agree that they can’t tell the difference between milk  from treated and untreated cattle. However, advocates, including some physicians, say the effects of bovine growth hormones  aren’t widely understood. In response to public demand, many  manufacturers and retailers, such as General Mills, Dannon and Wal-Mart,  have pledged to go hormone-free.
 
Tinkered Tofu 
 Scientists have created strains of corn, soybeans, wheat and other  crops that resist devastating insects and diseases. These crops have  been widely grown in the US for years, but not the European Union. Europeans are suspicious of genetically modified foods and what they  see as the corporate interests behind them. Some experts, including  world-renowned scientist David Suzuki, believe that genetically modified  foods are leading to an increase of antibiotic resistance, both in the  crops and the creatures that consume them — including humans.
 
Vibrant Breakfast Cereal
 If  it seems impossible to imagine a world in which cereal, mac-n-cheese,  candy and juice drinks don’t come in eye-popping colors,  just go to the  UK. 
Numerous studies  have shown the link between behavioral problems in children and the  laundry list of most common food colorings, including Yellow 5, Red 40,  Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, Orange B, Red 3 and Yellow 6. While the European Union hasn’t outlawed the dyes altogether, it does  require special labeling of foods with the dyes linked to behavioral  problems. Dr. David Schab, a psychiatrist at Columbia University Medical Center, said in 
this article that  “While not all children seem to be sensitive to these chemicals, it’s  hard to justify their continued use in foods, especially those foods  heavily marketed to young children.”
 
Bright White Flour
 Most dedicated bakers in the US are adamant: Bleached flour, which  has less protein than the unbleached kind, works best for making light  and fluffy cakes, waffles and pancakes.
 Bleached flour does have fewer nutrients than non-bleached flour, but that’s not the real issue here. 
In Europe, flour is whitened by letting it sit in the air for a week  or so. In the US, flour is bleached using food additives including  chlorine, bromates and peroxides, which have been banned in Europe and  many other countries since the early 1990s. The reason is that these  chemicals may cause cancer and were never really intended to be eaten in  the first place.
 
Man-Made Fats
 Found in everything from pastries to candy to peanut butter,  partially hydrogenated oils (which don’t exist in nature) are cheap,  create a great texture and by all accounts are really, really bad for  you. It’s no surprise that many European countries have strictly limited  the amount of hydrogenated oils in products. In 2003 Denmark, one of  the healthier countries in the world, introduced laws, limiting the  amount of trans fats in foods to no more than 2%. The United States didn’t even require manufacturers to list “trans  fats” — the stuff that makes hydrogenated oil so unhealthy — until 2006.  Because public health experts blame trans fats for a plethora of heart  diseases and cancers, many manufacturers are voluntarily giving them up.
 New York City banned man-made fats from being used in restaurants as  of July 2008 and California passed a similar law, which took effect on  January 1.
 
http://phreshliving.com/2010/10/17/u-s-foods-that-are-illegal-in-europe-for-health-reasons/