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Gabriel scores 58,000+ food products across 7 dimensions of quality. Feed composition, independent lab testing, processing methods, sourcing transparency, and more. Because "organic" and "pasture-raised" are starting points, not guarantees.
Happy Hens Organic Pastured Eggs
Corn & soy-free · Regenerative
Popular "Pasture-Raised" Brand
Soy-based feed · Label misleading
Conventional Grocery Eggs
Grain-fed · High omega-6 · No testing
The distance between what food packaging claims and what independent testing reveals has never been wider. Most consumers have no way to close that gap. Until now.
of "pasture-raised" labels are required to disclose what the animals actually eat
of imported olive oils tested by UC Davis failed authenticity standards. Most are cut with cheaper seed oils.
the gap between the label and reality. The average supplement contains 108mg less active ingredient than claimed. Food labels are even less regulated.
Every certification on a food package answers one question. Gabriel answers the questions that certifications were never designed to ask.
Implies chickens roam freely on open pasture
Certified organic feed and practices
Sounds clean and natural
✗ No feed composition disclosure
✗ No fatty acid profile testing
✗ No contaminant or heavy metal data
✗ "Pasture-raised" has no legal minimum time outdoors
✗ Hormones are already banned in poultry by law
Any single metric tells a partial story. Feed quality without lab testing is incomplete. Lab testing without sourcing transparency is unverifiable. Gabriel combines all seven because your biology responds to all seven.
"Pasture-raised" tells you where the chicken stands. It tells you nothing about what the chicken eats. Soy-based feed produces eggs with inflammatory omega-6 fatty acid profiles regardless of where the chicken lives. We score what actually affects your biology.
A single data source gives you a single perspective. We pull from independent lab testing, regulatory records, community reports, brand transparency disclosures, and agricultural databases. Seven dimensions of quality, not one number from one source.
Scoring food quality is useful. Connecting it to your specific health situation is transformative. Gabriel knows that someone with Hashimoto's needs different dairy guidance than someone optimizing athletic recovery. The score is the starting point. The clinical context is the value.
Brands reformulate. Supply chains change. Testing reveals new information. Our scoring updates weekly. When independent testing reveals that a trusted brand changed their feed composition or a new contaminant is detected, the score adjusts before the next recommendation.
Each product is scored across seven dimensions, weighted by their impact on the quality and safety of what reaches your plate.
What did the animal actually eat? Soy and corn-based feed produces a dramatically different fatty acid profile than pasture-foraged diets. The difference between inflammatory and anti-inflammatory is often in the feed, not the certification.
Third-party verified results for contaminants, heavy metals, PFAS, microplastics, pesticide residue, and fatty acid profiles. Self-reported data is not the same as independently tested data. We know the difference.
Raw, minimally processed, or ultra-processed. Every step of processing affects nutrient density, enzyme activity, and bioavailability. A cold-pressed olive oil and a refined one are fundamentally different products wearing the same name.
Organic is a starting point, not a finish line. USDA Organic prohibits synthetic pesticides and GMOs, which matters. But it says nothing about feed quality, fatty acid profiles, or nutrient density. Organic soy-fed eggs are still high in omega-6.
Regenerative agriculture rebuilds soil biology, which directly increases the nutrient density of what grows in it. Mineral content in conventionally farmed produce has declined 5-40% over the past 50 years. Regenerative farming reverses that trajectory.
Can we trace this product to a specific farm, region, or supply chain? Single-origin is verifiable. Aggregated from multiple unnamed sources is not. Transparency is not marketing. It is accountability.
Does what the package claims match what independent investigation reveals? When a brand markets "pasture-raised" eggs from soy-fed chickens, the label and reality have diverged. We track those divergences.
Every category has its own quality signals. Feed composition matters for eggs. Adulteration detection matters for olive oil. A2 casein status matters for dairy. We know the difference.
Feed composition, soy-free verification, fatty acid profiles
Adulteration detection, cold-press verification, origin tracing
Grass-fed verification, antibiotic use, regenerative practices
A1 vs A2 casein, grass-fed status, processing methods
TDS, PFAS, microplastics, pH, fluoride content, source quality
Hidden seed oils, added sugars, processing level, sourcing
A food quality score in isolation is information. A food quality score connected to your health profile, your location, and your budget is intelligence.
Gabriel does not just score food in isolation. When you tell Gabriel about your symptoms, conditions, or health goals, it recommends specific products from this database that are clinically relevant to you. Brain fog gets different recommendations than autoimmune support.
Gabriel knows which stores near you carry the products it recommends. Not aspirational advice about finding a local farmer. Specific brands, specific stores, specific aisles. Actionable today.
Every top recommendation includes budget alternatives that still meet our quality threshold. Clean eating is not exclusively for people who shop at specialty stores. Gabriel finds the best option at every price point.
Independently verified, transparently sourced, clean composition. Gabriel's top recommendation in its category.
Solid quality across most dimensions. Minor gaps in testing or transparency. A confident choice.
Better than conventional. Some quality concerns or missing data. Gabriel may suggest better alternatives.
Significant quality gaps, label discrepancies, or untested claims. Proceed with full information.
Known issues: adulteration, contamination, or misleading claims verified by independent testing.
A lower score does not always mean a product is harmful. Some products score low simply because independent testing data does not yet exist. Transparency is a choice, and we reward brands that make it.