11.02.2011
TOP TEN BIZARRE INGREDIENTS IN FOOD
10. GOLD
Gold is one of the most popular metals used in jewelry. It is also very useful in electronics. In addition to its more common uses, gold is used as a food additive, usually for decorative purposes in the form of gold leaf (food additive number 175). It is quite popular as an additive to alcoholic drinks and there is a traditional Polish and German liqueur called Goldwasser (Goldwater), which contains thousands of tiny flakes. Gold is inert to body chemistry so it passes through the body unaltered and has no nutritional value.
9. VIRUSES
In August 2006, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the use of bacteriophages in the preparation of food (specifically ready-to-eat meat products). A bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria; the point of applying these viruses to food is they will kill any bacteria that might cause food poisoning. Every year, twenty-five hundred Americans get sick from listeriosis; consequently, millions of Americans now regularly chow down on viruses added intentionally to stop those few thousand people getting sick. The FDA does not require that food treated with these viruses should carry a label. Frighteningly, they say, “As long as it [is] used in accordance with the regulations, we have concluded it’s safe.” Worthwhile? You be the judge.
8. BORAX
Borax: fire retardant, insecticide, treatment for horse thrush, component in glass and detergent, and … food ingredient. Borax is illegal as a food additive in the U.S. in all goods except caviar, but not so in many other nations. In some Asian countries it is found in noodles, meatballs, and steamed rice. It can have serious toxic effects on humans, particularly affecting the testes.
7. COAL TAR
Once upon a time, amaranth was used as a food coloring (red to be specific) but scientific testing found it to be extremely carcinogenic, so someone came up with a replacement: allura red AC. Allura red AC is made from coal tar (a liquid byproduct of turning coal into coal gas or coke). Coal tar is flammable and is frequently used in medicated shampoos designed to kill head lice. It is also used to make Tylenol. While allura red AC is not carcinogenic, it can cause vomiting and other side effects in some people. Despite this, it is FDA-approved and very common in candy and soft drinks.
6. VARNISH
Okay, to be more exact we are talking about shellac, which was very commonly used as a varnish back in the old days (from around 1880-1930) before it was replaced with lacquer. Shellac is used in baking and in mass-produced candy to give the finished product a nice shine. The most likely source of shellac in most of our readers’ diets will be from Skittles, the colorful coated fruit-flavored candies. Now that we know how much we love to eat shellac, we should probably also point out it is made from a secretion of the female lac beetle. She excretes the shellac onto branches in order to help her cocoon stick.
5. BUGS
Cochineal and carmine are two red food colorings derived from bugs, the cochineal bug to be exact. Cochineal is produced by drying and pulverizing the whole body of the cochineal bug; carmine is a derivative of cochineal powder. The bugs are usually killed by immersing them in boiling water—the amount of time they spent in the water determines the level of redness—whether it be a lighter orange color or a vivid red. 155,000 insects are needed to make two pounds of food dye. Cochineal has been used for hundreds of years and it is also a very popular cloth dye.
4. CIGARETTES
You read that right… Cigarette smoking has been banned from bars and pubs all around the world, so someone came up with a brilliant idea: if you can’t smoke it, eat it! The trick is to take a fine bottle of spirits (usually vodka but sometimes brandy, etc.) and drop a smoke or two in it (or a cigar in the case of brandy). The nicotine, and other chemicals, seep out of the cigarette and infuse flavor and color into the drink. These concoctions are often called “nicotine tea.” I was fortunate (?) enough to try one at a bar recently and I can’t say I enjoyed the drink a great deal.
3. BEAVER ASS
Beaver anal juice, castoreum, is not yet able to be synthesized so it is still used in foodstuffs. It is most commonly found as a flavor enhancer in raspberry products; apparently it adds a nice rounded flavor. It is also found in chewing gum and cigarettes. The question is: who the hell discovered beaver poop juice tasted good with raspberries?
2. HUMAN HAIR
L-cysteine is an amino acid commonly used in baked goods because it adds elasticity and helps soften dough. It is also commonly used in hair perm solutions. You can find it in bagels, doughnuts, bread, cookies, and frankly, a hell of a lot of yummy things. The cheapest way to produce it (and therefore the most common source at present) is by a special chemical process using human hair, most of which is sourced (and prepared) in China. Because of this, it has led to some debate over whether eating products containing l-cysteine is a type of cannibalism. In China it was also used in the production of soy sauce: “When asking [the soy manufacturer] how the amino acid syrup (or powder) was generated, [he] replied that the powder was generated from human hair. Because the human hair was gathered from salon [sic], barbershop [sic] and hospitals around the country, it was unhygienic and mixed with condom [sic], used hospital cottons, used menstrual cycle pad [sic], used syringe [sic], etc.”
1. POOP
A common ingredient found in poop is called skatole. The word comes from the ancient Greek root “skat” meaning “dung”; this is the same root from which we get “scatology,” the study of feces. It is derived from mammals (it is produced in their digestive tract) and it smells (not surprisingly) like poop. This delightful ingredient is used in cigarettes, many perfumes and, most importantly for the purposes of this list, strawberry ice cream. Like the beaver ass above, someone discovered strawberry flavor is greatly enhanced with the addition of a little dung. Frankly, I will stick to pepper.
By Jamie Frater in '"The Ultimate Book of Top Ten Lists: A Mind-Boggling Collection of Fun, Fascinating and Bizarre Facts on Movies, Music, Sports, Crime, Celebrities, History, Trivia and More", Ulysses Press, 2009, p.499-594. Digitized, adapted and illustrated to be posted by Leopoldo Costa.
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