irisarbor wrote:SO how can you tell if you ARE buying 100% olive oil or the adulterated junk?
What's a housewife and cook to do?
(I already check the label for country of origin and for those that do label when they are a blend...)
Freezer Pig wrote:Turkey ham and turkey bacon just pisses me off.......... this is just flat out false advertising.
Tim
Freezer Pig wrote:Turkey ham and turkey bacon just pisses me off.......... this is just flat out false advertising.
Cathy2 wrote: She is delighted with her bacon, though it is inferior to the real thing.
Some people want to be fooled.
Regards,
TCK wrote:Turkey bacon is not necessarily "better" for you than regular bacon, anyways.
Cathy2 wrote:TCK wrote:Turkey bacon is not necessarily "better" for you than regular bacon, anyways.
Those who want to believe otherwise will rarely reconsider their opinion. It's like politics.
David Hammond wrote:
Most shocking that Captain Crunch is actually Commander Crunch.
David Hammond wrote:Mast chocolate may be fake "artisanal" : http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2015/12/mast-brothers-chocolate-scandal
Not long ago, I bought Mast chocolate for a friend of mine recovering from eye surgery. He loves chocolate and he liked the Mast bars I brought him. It seems, though, that fancy packaging and pricing convinces us that this is a higher quality chocolate than it may actually be (wouldn't be the first time for that). If people like it, though, maybe it doesn't matter. I dunno.
Some companies that promise 100% parmesan cheese, have been adding cellulose, a common food additive made from wood pulp, to their cheese products, according to an independent study, launched by Bloomberg News.
An independent laboratory test found that products like Walmart store's Great Value 100% grated parmesan cheese registered 7.8% cellulose, Jewel-Osco’s Essential Everyday 100% parmesan cheese was 8.8% cellulose and Kraft had 3.8% cellulose, Bloomberg reported.
Jewel-Osco has pulled Essential Everyday Parmesan Cheese from all 185 of its stores amid concerns that the grated cheese contains high levels of cellulose, an anti-clumping agent made from wood.
stevez wrote:It's hardly difficult to find freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano at your local Italian deli or even the supermarket (OK, probably not Jewel, but Mariano's usually has it in their cheese dept.). Why would anyone in our fair city buy the stuff in the green can in the first place?
Geo wrote:[Another issue one might raise, of course, is: what are you doing with gooey cheese-stuff gratings? I'll leave that for another time! ]
Geo