These words appear on almost all food labels these days, but they are kind of meaningless. Take something like those flavoured waters, “ingredients: water, flavour”. They taste amazing, there’s definitely a bunch of ‘stuff’ in there, but they don’t tell us what it is on the label?
I thought we used to have number codes for additives and what-not that they had to disclose so we knew what was in it. Did the food labelling laws change somehow? Or are these new additives something different which can just hide behind the word ‘flavour’? Genuinely curious if anyone has some idea, there doesn’t seem to be any explanations on the food standards website…
It’s probably a trade off between telling you what it really is and protecting IP.
Also, do you really want to know natural flavour could be smashed beetle anus?
Yes, I would really like to be able to avoid animal products in food and natural flavors doesn’t give me enough information to do so.
Even the strictest vegan eats about kilo of bugs ever year; there’s far bigger things to worry about in life.
I’d rather be given the choice than not and say: that’s just how things are.
Uranium is natural. Not sure what it tastes like. Perhaps someone would be kind enough to report back.
Got yer back, yo
Sure, if it’s not a known allergen/high risk, why would a company risk their IP.
It sounds like it could be sold for a high price at a gastro restaurant.
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Course 7 Foam of beetle anus
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Not too far from the truth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmine
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shellac
Poor Ringo…
Edit: Aww, you changed it all stealthy like :(