Gatorade to drop BVO after consumer complaints
BVO sounds like a harmless abbreviation
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Chicago Tribune - by Monica Eng - 1 day ago
Responding to consumer complaints, PepsiCo says it will remove brominated vegetable oil from citrus-flavored Gatorade sold in the U.S..
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All in all, about 10 percent of all sodas sold in the U.S. contain BVO, so it pays to read the list of ingredients. Better yet, make a concerted effort to eliminate soda from your diet altogether. With or without BVO, sodas contain so many ingredients harmful to your health—high fructose corn syrup being one of the foremost culprits—that they really have noredeeming value whatsoever. And please do not make the mistake of switching from regular soda to diet, as artificial sweetened drinks may be the worse of two evils. Also beware of drinks containing sodium benzoate, and Yellow Dye #5. The latter is also known as tartrazine, and has been banned in Norway, Austria and Germany due to its ill health effects.
"Natural flavors" have some interesting definitions as apparently Natural flavor Vanilla can be created from wood pulp unless from the vanilla bean,
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The FDA Does Not Check Food Label Accuracy
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TRUTH ABOUT TASTES America's favorite ice cream is flavored with wood pulp, and If this information comes as any surprise to you, just read the What is the reason? Are not natural flavors good enough? Of "It is not necessarily better, though," insist chemists at "Make mine vanilla," cry more than half of America's It just so happens that vanilla loses some of its taste when it "A number of other natural flavors have not kept up with the |