Disrupting The Edible Oil Industry: I Love Camelina Launches on Indiegogo
A groundbreaking new superfood cooking oil with 35% omega-3s launches on Indiegogo to replace seed oils with regenerative, chef-grade Camelina.
'We're bringing ancient nutrition into modern kitchens. This isn't just oil — it's a health movement. Camelina delivers real Omega-3s, clean flavor, and clinical backing.'— Marc Jacobson, Founder of I Love Camelina™
MOUNTAINSIDE, NJ, UNITED STATES, May 20, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- I Love Camelina ™ has launched a bold Indiegogo campaign to bring one of the world's healthiest and most sustainable oils directly to American kitchens. Camelina Oil has a 9,000-year agricultural history—and now being reintroduced by a mission-driven wellness brand focused on replacing harmful seed oils, and low quality, untraceable olive oils and avocado oils while educating the nation.
With chronic disease, inflammation, and metabolic disorders at an all-time high, Americans are finally waking up to the dangers of industrial oils and processed fats. The timing for Camelina couldn't be more urgent.
Ask ChatGPT, Google, or Meta AI what the healthiest oil is — then come back, support this Indiegogo campaign and taste it for yourself.
Support our Indiegogo launch and claim your first bottles today.
https://tinyurl.com/CamelinaOil
I Love Camelina™ is a premium chef-quality oil built for real cooking: roasting, sautéing, frying, grilling, smoking, BBQ, Blackstone grills, baking and perfect for stainless-steel, cast-iron pans and high temp air fryers.
I Love Camelina™ offers two signature oils:
• Virgin Camelina Oil: Light, smooth, fresh aroma and so very versatile. An everyday high heat cooking oil that also shines in smoothies, marinades, dressings, mayo, and sauces.
• Roasted Reserve Camelina Oil: Lightly toasted and nutty fragrance. A golden finishing oil ideal for drizzling over vegetables, meats, fish, pasta, seafood, artisan charcuterie, breads and hot baked treats.
Unlike olive or avocado oil, I Love Camelina™ combines superior Omega-3 nutrition with real cooking performance. It doesn't degrade at high heat, and it actually tastes incredible—fresh, clean, and balanced. It lets your real food shine.
Backed by peer-reviewed clinical data, Camelina has been shown to support cardiovascular health, reduce C-reactive protein, and lower LDL cholesterol in at-risk patients — while providing one of the most stable oil profiles available to consumers.
What Makes I Love Camelina™ Different?
• 35% Omega-3 ALA per tablespoon (3,700 mg+)
• Cold-pressed and unrefined
• Non-GMO, vegan, and gluten-free
• Shelf-stable for 24+ months
• Sustainable crop with regenerative farming benefits
• Bottled in dark glass for maximum freshness and flavor
'We're bringing ancient nutrition into modern kitchens. This isn't just oil — it's a health movement,' said Marc Jacobson, Founder of I Love Camelina™. 'Camelina delivers real Omega-3s, clean flavor, and clinical backing. For consumers, chefs and restaurants, food manufacturers, and anyone still using toxic seed oils and other untraceable alternatives: there's finally a better choice.'
Our mission goes beyond food. Through the Camelina Cares™ initiative, we're donating 1% of profits to fund brain and heart research, as well as regenerative agriculture and Camelina-specific clinical studies.
Indiegogo Campaign Highlights
Backers of I Love Camelina™ will receive exclusive first-edition production and access to exclusive limited-edition upcoming drops, discounts and swag. Lucky supporters could win 'Oil for a Year,' as well as other monthly raffles and giveaways throughout the rest of 2025 on www.ILoveCamelina.com.
Only 10 days remain in the campaign window — and this first production batch and rewards will not be available again. Early backers secure faster shipping, better pricing, and VIP access to upcoming limited drops. Most importantly, bragging rights for backing the future of a sustainable, vegan, healthy, Omega-3 cooking oil.
Indiegogo orders will be fulfilled within 30–45 days of campaign close, and shipping begins the 2nd week of July or sooner.
Support the Indiegogo launch
https://tinyurl.com/CamelinaOil
Visit www.ILoveCamelina.com for a 15% discount code and early access to our Indiegogo campaign and extras.
Consumers, schools, food manufacturers, university researchers, investors, and retailers are invited to learn more at www.ILoveCamelina.com.
Media Contact:
Gary Jacoby
I Love Camelina Inc.
1199 US Highway 22
Mountainside, NJ 07092
(833) OMEGA-3-0
[email protected]
www.ILoveCamelina.com
###
Marc Jacobson
I Love Camelina Inc.
+1 833-663-4230
[email protected]
Visit us on social media:
LinkedIn
Instagram
Facebook
YouTube
TikTok
X
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Surgeon: Texas junk food bill a step in the right direction
(NewsNation) — Lawmakers in Texas are taking more steps to make the state 'healthy again.' A new bill that was passed unanimously by the state legislature would require junk food like Doritos and Skittles to come with a warning label. The bill is now at Gov. Greg Abbott's desk. Dr. Evan Nadler, a surgeon and founder of Pro-Care Consultants, told NewsNation that any effort to make American food better and healthier is one that everyone should be behind. Fusarium graminearum caught being smuggled into US: What to know 'That's why it was a unanimously supported bill,' Nadler said. 'Forcing the food industry to rethink how they color foods or how some foods are manufactured. It's certainly a welcome step in the right direction.' Nadler said putting warning labels on foods could actually lead to consumers making better healthier choices, and pointed to sugar, sweet and beverage taxes that are in effect in certain cities across the U.S. and European countries. He added, however,that they have only had a small impact on the consumption of junk foods. According to the National Institutes of Health, more than 40% of adults in the U.S. have obesity, and more than 19% of children in the country ages 2 to 19 have obesity. Nadler said it'll take a multi-pronged approach, aside from warning labels on foods, to tackle the issue and make people in America healthier. Low levels of lead exposure may worsen academic performance: Study 'Changing food quality, policy and making exercise more available helps,' Nadler said. 'The reality is that for a lot of people, those have been tried and they don't really do enough.' Nadler added that medications and interventions to help with health issues related to obesity need to be more affordable and widely available to people. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Chinese researchers' alleged plot to smuggle crop-killing fungus into US is an ‘attack on US food supply': feds
National security authorities and members of Congress are raising alarm over the alleged plot by two romantically involved Chinese researchers to smuggle samples of a dangerous crop-killing fungus into the US. Yunquing Jian, 33, a Communist Party loyalist and lab researcher at the University of Michigan who received Chinese government funding for her work, plotted the illicit transport of the pathogen with her boyfriend, Zunyong Liu, 34, the FBI alleged. Liu was was caught at Detroit Metropolitan Airport last July after allegedly attempting to sneak packages of Fusarium graminearum into the country, the feds said. 'This is an attack on the American food supply,' one senior Trump administration official told The Post. Advertisement 4 Yunqing Jian (pictured) initially denied that she was aware of her boyfriend's intent to smuggle the pathogen. University of Michigan The fungus is already present in the US, but if it was manipulated to become resistant to treatment or to spread more easily, it could have the potential to devastate American farms, one expert told The Post. The US should be testing the fungus sample for any evidence it's been tampered with, the expert added. There are similar allegations that the virus that causes COVID-19 was enhanced by China's Wuhan Institute of Virology as part of US-funded 'gain-of-function' research of the naturally occurring SARS pathogen. China denies that COVID leaked from the lab, but US intel agencies now say that appears to be the most likely cause of the pandemic. Advertisement 'The CCP will use every tool in its warfare toolbox to cripple the United States and bring us to our knees. A pathogen like this, if successfully introduced into a crop, could inflict significant economic loss for U.S. agriculture producers,' House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rick Crawford (R-Ark.) told The Post. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) said it appears the FBI may have intercepted a 'potential bioweapon.' 'We are very fortunate the Trump administration and federal law enforcement stopped this potential bioweapon before it compromised our nation's food supply,' Ernst told The Post. 4 Chinese national Yunqing Jian, 33, a University of Michigan lab researcher, is charged with her fellow researcher boyfriend, Zunyong Liu, of conspiring to smuggle a potentially dangerous fungal pathogen into the US. Sanilac County Jail Advertisement 'This is exactly why I have always said and will continue to say – food security is national security. Between this latest bioweapon and China's highly-concerning purchases of U.S. farmland around our military bases, we must stay on guard against the threat from Communist China in our own backyard.' According to the feds, the Chinese couple discussed how they could smuggle Fusarium graminearum into the US — a biological pathogen considered 'a potential agroterrorism weapon' capable of destroying crops and poisoning both livestock and humans, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court in Michigan Monday. Both Jian and Liu were charged Monday in a federal criminal complaint with conspiracy, smuggling goods into the US, false statements and visa fraud. 'The bacteria infects wheat, barley, corn and rice. When it does, it can devastate crops,' one national security source who specializes in agricultural microbiology told The Post. Advertisement 'The key question is if the bacterial strain being brought in has been modified to make it resistant to treatment or to make it more pathogenic.' 4 Liu was caught at Detroit Metropolitan Airport last July with four plastic baggies containing 'fibrous material' infected with the pathogen. AP The source added that it could be dangerous 'if the Chinese manipulated the strain' and that federal investigators should 'have a genome sequence done' on the samples Jian and Liu allegedly conspired to smuggle into the country. On July 27, 2024, Liu, who works as a researcher at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, arrived in Detroit on a Delta flight from Shanghai and was interviewed by Customs and Border Patrol agents about the purpose of his travel. He claimed he was in the US to visit Jian, a lab researcher at the University of Michigan whom he identified as his girlfriend. Upon searching his belongings, agents found four plastic baggies containing 'fibrous material' infected with the pathogen, as well as a round piece of filter paper with a series of circles drawn on it, concealed in his backpack in a ball of wadded up tissues. According to the criminal complaint, Liu initially denied the items were his, suggesting someone else had put them into his bag without his knowledge. However he later admitted they were different strains of Fusarium graminearum he intended to research at the Molecular Plant-Microbe Interaction (MPMI) Laboratory at the University of Michigan, where Jian conducts research on similar pathogens. He also acknowledged he hid the materials when traveling to the US because he knew border patrol agents would confiscate them if they were discovered. Advertisement The circled filter paper found in his possession contained 10 separate coded samples, including one that 'would allow a researcher to propagate live Fusarium graminearum,' the complaint states. Liu told investigators that he planned to clone the different strains and make more samples if the experiments on the bagged materials failed. He was denied entry into the US and fast-tracked for removal to China. While searching one of Liu's cell phones, they found an article in PDF form titled '2018 Plant-Pathogen Warfare under Changing Climate Conditions.' Authorities said the article specifically referenced Fusarium graminearum as 'an example of a destructive disease and pathogen for crops' and is 'responsible for billions of dollars in economic losses worldwide each year.' 4 Fusarium graminearum can have a devastating effect on staple US crops including wheat, barley, corn and rice. AP Advertisement The FBI interviewed Jian at the MPMI Laboratory in February, where she first claimed she only learned of the alleged smuggling scheme when Liu was caught by CBP, and denied assisting him in his research of Fusarium graminearum. Upon searching Jian's cell phone, the FBI said it discovered a document she signed originating from Zhejiang University, where Liu conducts research on the pathogen, which included a loyalty pledge to 'adhere to the four basic principles' and 'support the leadership of the Communist Party of China.' FBI Special Agent Edward Nieh said in his affidavit that one of the principles Jian signed her allegiance to includes 'upholding Mao Zedong thought and Marxism-Leninism.' Investigators said she signed the document Jan. 11, 2024, just six months before Liu allegedly flew to Detroit with the samples in tow. Advertisement Further investigation into Liu and Jian's communications indicate it wasn't the first time the pair had discussed smuggling the fetid fungus into the US. One unearthed exchange from Aug. 12, 2022 on the Chinese messaging app WeChat reveals the couple scheming on how to sneak the seeds past US customs officials, with Liu advising Jian to hid the materials in her shoes. A day later, Jian arrived at San Francisco International Airport on a United Airlines flight from Seoul. Authorities reviewed records from her entry and found she did not declare she was importing any biological materials. Rutgers University molecular biologist Dr. Richard Ebright told The Post that Fusarium graminearum causes estimated losses of $200-400 million to US agriculture every year. Advertisement However, he said, the fungus has been endemic in the US for more than 40 years, and that new introduction of the organism into the US does not, by itself, pose a new threat. 'Importation of Fusarium graminearum without a USDA PPQ526 permit should not have occurred,' he said. 'However, unless the imported strain was a new strain having enhanced transmissibility or virulence, its importation likely posed no threat to US agriculture or US security,' he added, noting that if Jian had gone through proper permitting procedure to obtain the pathogen, it 'almost certainly would have been approved and arrests would not have occurred.' Jian, who received a J1 visa to conduct research as a postdoctoral scholar at a University of Texas lab, was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan before being offered a job in August 2023. The University of Michigan did not respond to The Post's questions about whether she is still employed there following the allegations. The Post also reached out to Jian at her university email address but did not hear back. Liu secured a B2 tourist visa in March 2024, which does not allow foreign nationals to perform work or scientific research during their visit. Jian was temporarily detained by authorities on June 3 until her detention hearing scheduled for Thursday at 1 p.m. Her case has been assigned to the public defender's office but an attorney had not been named by Wednesday evening. Liu remains at large with a warrant out for his arrest.


The Hill
3 hours ago
- The Hill
WH budget chief pressed on PEPFAR funds, says Africa ‘needs to absorb more of the burden'
Office and Management Budget Director Russell Vought on Wednesday was pressed on proposed cuts to the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) pursued as part of a new rescissions request from the Trump administration. During a budget hearing on Wednesday, Vought defended proposed reductions as targeting items like 'teaching young children how to make environmentally friendly reproductive health decisions,' and efforts he claimed were aimed at strengthening 'the resilience of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer global movements.' 'We can find waste, fraud and abuse there that the American people would not support, and it's one of the reasons why it's in the package, but it will not lead to life saving treatment being denied,' he said during the hearing. Congress, under the Biden administration, appropriated approximately $7 billion for PEPFAR in fiscal year 2024. The program is considered to be one of America's most consequential programs in Africa and is credited with saving 25 million lives and scaling back the AIDS epidemic. Vought was pressed again about his comments as a follow-up question from Rep. Mark Alford (R-Mo.) during the hearing and potential cuts to prevention efforts. 'Aside from the crazy woke programs, which I agree should be stripped,' Alford asked, 'is there any other prevention program, not treatment, but prevention program listed in this rescission package which is not of a woke nature?' Vought said in response that the administration seeks to scale 'down the program as it pertains to the types of organizations that are providing the examples of the waste, fraud and abuse.' But he also said 'the prevention itself is where an analytical look needs to be done.' 'There's life saving treatment after you already have HIV, but there are prevention programs that PEPFAR does, which are not of the woke nature, which can prevent someone from getting HIV,' Alford countered. 'Are those programs going to survive?' 'It is something that our budget will be very trim on because we believe that many of these nonprofits are not geared toward the viewpoints of the administration, and we're $37 trillion in debt,' Vought responded. 'So, at some point, the continent of Africa needs to absorb more of the burden of providing this healthcare.' The moment comes as the prospect of PEPFAR cuts has prompted concern from some congressional Republicans as part of a larger request sent by the Trump administration to cut more than $9 billion in congressionally approved funds for foreign aid and public broadcasting programs. Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) has also voiced opposition to cutting PEPFAR, saying Wednesday that the idea makes 'no sense to me whatsoever.' 'Given the extraordinary record of PEPFAR in saving lives, it has literally saved millions of lives, and so I do not see a basis for cutting it,' she said.