well what is "iced tea" right.. I tried to do that the other month.. lol. but if you involve them trying to do, lol.. "peach" doesn't work out so well, eh. Lemon was "ok" this weekend. Winding it down.
I am not a tea snob but can confirm that you are correct. Instead of adding water to dehydrated tea, skip a step and soak your own leaves. There will be less extra chemicals.
WOW.....
Sunset yellow FCF is known as FD&C yellow No. 6
I assume you are being sarcastic. Since that's used to whiten things. They use it in tampons, pad, skittles, ice cream...a lot of different foods. Creamers, chocolates, gums.
Was sprinkling some of this barrel of country time on the drinks today but realizing this is literal toxic shit, last drink was like, lol.. "no". And if I drop off the leftover barrel in the work lunchroom, could get sued for them being ill. lol. So just gonna have to throw it out eh. It'd poison a whole damn neighborhood this shit.
titanium dioxide food ingredient.. like it's in what types of common food products?
Searching for: titanium dioxide food ingredient
Generating answers for you…
Titanium dioxide is a food additive that is used to whiten or brighten foods. It is a white powder made of small particles that reflect light. Some of the common food products that contain titanium dioxide are:
Chewing gum
Candies
Pastries
Chocolates
Coffee creamers
Cake decorations
White sauces
It really doesn't wanna go there, this AI shit, eh. I ask:
what's this got to do with the metal word "titanium" which you'd hear about where it'd make a stronger metal.. but for some reason they're doing a "dioxide" of it, which means what?
Searching for: titanium dioxide chemistry
Generating answers for you…
Titanium is a metal that has a high strength-to-weight ratio, meaning it is very strong but also very light. Titanium dioxide is a compound of titanium and oxygen, with the chemical formula TiO$_2$. It is a white powder that is used as a pigment, a sunscreen, and a food additive. Titanium dioxide has different properties from titanium metal, such as being insoluble in water and having a high refractive index12
A dioxide is a type of oxide, which is a compound of oxygen and another element. A dioxide has two oxygen atoms for every one atom of the other element. For example, carbon dioxide (CO$_2$) has one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms. Dioxides can have different chemical and physical properties from their parent elements, depending on how they are bonded and arranged34
Why would these illuminati conglomerate companies be having anything to do with "heavy metals" into food products. ROFL.
Nice of them to do that.. just to make this shit more "white". They were like hangin out after some satanic ritual on a weekend and were like.. yeah.. let's put heavy metals in the food. lol. Cause those "food colorings" weren't bad enough.. let's just straight-up, take some of these metal grindings from the workshop shelf making work grinding shop floor and put that in your fuckin country time lemonade tang powder. lol
it's essentially coming from the titanium metal?
Generating answers for you…
Yes, titanium dioxide is derived from titanium metal, but it is not the same as titanium metal. Titanium dioxide is a compound that has different properties and uses from titanium metal. Titanium metal is used for making strong and lightweight alloys, while titanium dioxide is used for making white pigments, sunscreens, and food additives.
Isn't that lovely of Kraft Heinz to grab some metal filing leftover from the container barrel and put that shit in the damn powder mix. Fills the barrel, costs them less.
I figured it out about this "titanium dioxide" in the country time lemonade.
It's just left over metal grindings from making the barrel rim, that they straight-up put in the powder so it fills it up and costs them less, don't have to pay to haul it out.
People won't buy things unless they look just right. They will ignore a product until the right amount of toxins are put in to make it aesthetically pleasing. Check out how much food goes to waste for not being perfect.
People are stupid.
Also, a can of lemon pledge contains more actual lemon than that entire barrel of mix.
Interesting, how that happens that there is any sales of artificial lemonade made from chemicals in a country where lemons are domestic product, and not even expensive one?
IDK, it is like selling artificial flour in Russia made from chemicals instead of real wheat/rye, artificial mashed potatoes in Belarus or artificial apple pies in Poland.
I could get the idea of selling instant coffee, or premixed cake mix, people are lazy and all that stuff. Also I understand that making ready beverages in bottles/cans from chemicals could be profitable, as they will have much longer shelf life than natural ones. But there is no any difference between making lemonade from a fresh lemon with spoon of sugar and making lemonade from that powder.
Does anybody really buy that stuff, or it is just occupy supermarket shelves since it have long enough shelf life and stores like long shelf life products?
Really, I don't see anything really harmful in the list of ingridients of that powder, titanium dioxide is just white pigment, naturally occuring in soil in noticeable amount, so you are daily breath it with soil dust while there are no rain. But the whole idea of making things like this lemonade powder makes me puzzled.
Sugar and lemon juice would give you a better, and cheaper lemonade. Add some ice tea once in a while.
well what is "iced tea" right.. I tried to do that the other month.. lol. but if you involve them trying to do, lol.. "peach" doesn't work out so well, eh. Lemon was "ok" this weekend. Winding it down.
I am a tea snob. Just make sure all the ingredients for the tea are plants, at any price point. It will tastes better.
I am not a tea snob but can confirm that you are correct. Instead of adding water to dehydrated tea, skip a step and soak your own leaves. There will be less extra chemicals.
WOW..... Sunset yellow FCF is known as FD&C yellow No. 6
I assume you are being sarcastic. Since that's used to whiten things. They use it in tampons, pad, skittles, ice cream...a lot of different foods. Creamers, chocolates, gums.
Banned in Europe....
Organic tampons are getting scarce.
Was sprinkling some of this barrel of country time on the drinks today but realizing this is literal toxic shit, last drink was like, lol.. "no". And if I drop off the leftover barrel in the work lunchroom, could get sued for them being ill. lol. So just gonna have to throw it out eh. It'd poison a whole damn neighborhood this shit.
Let's have a go at just that one ingredient. lol.
titanium dioxide food ingredient.. like it's in what types of common food products?
Searching for: titanium dioxide food ingredient
Generating answers for you…
Titanium dioxide is a food additive that is used to whiten or brighten foods. It is a white powder made of small particles that reflect light. Some of the common food products that contain titanium dioxide are:
Chewing gum
Candies
Pastries
Chocolates
Coffee creamers
Cake decorations
White sauces
It really doesn't wanna go there, this AI shit, eh. I ask:
what's this got to do with the metal word "titanium" which you'd hear about where it'd make a stronger metal.. but for some reason they're doing a "dioxide" of it, which means what?
Searching for: titanium dioxide chemistry
Generating answers for you…
Titanium is a metal that has a high strength-to-weight ratio, meaning it is very strong but also very light. Titanium dioxide is a compound of titanium and oxygen, with the chemical formula TiO$_2$. It is a white powder that is used as a pigment, a sunscreen, and a food additive. Titanium dioxide has different properties from titanium metal, such as being insoluble in water and having a high refractive index12
A dioxide is a type of oxide, which is a compound of oxygen and another element. A dioxide has two oxygen atoms for every one atom of the other element. For example, carbon dioxide (CO$_2$) has one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms. Dioxides can have different chemical and physical properties from their parent elements, depending on how they are bonded and arranged34
Why would these illuminati conglomerate companies be having anything to do with "heavy metals" into food products. ROFL.
Nice of them to do that.. just to make this shit more "white". They were like hangin out after some satanic ritual on a weekend and were like.. yeah.. let's put heavy metals in the food. lol. Cause those "food colorings" weren't bad enough.. let's just straight-up, take some of these metal grindings from the workshop shelf making work grinding shop floor and put that in your fuckin country time lemonade tang powder. lol
it's essentially coming from the titanium metal?
Generating answers for you…
Yes, titanium dioxide is derived from titanium metal, but it is not the same as titanium metal. Titanium dioxide is a compound that has different properties and uses from titanium metal. Titanium metal is used for making strong and lightweight alloys, while titanium dioxide is used for making white pigments, sunscreens, and food additives.
Isn't that lovely of Kraft Heinz to grab some metal filing leftover from the container barrel and put that shit in the damn powder mix. Fills the barrel, costs them less.
I figured it out about this "titanium dioxide" in the country time lemonade.
It's just left over metal grindings from making the barrel rim, that they straight-up put in the powder so it fills it up and costs them less, don't have to pay to haul it out.
Titanium dioxide is a "whitener".
People won't buy things unless they look just right. They will ignore a product until the right amount of toxins are put in to make it aesthetically pleasing. Check out how much food goes to waste for not being perfect.
People are stupid.
Also, a can of lemon pledge contains more actual lemon than that entire barrel of mix.
Interesting, how that happens that there is any sales of artificial lemonade made from chemicals in a country where lemons are domestic product, and not even expensive one?
IDK, it is like selling artificial flour in Russia made from chemicals instead of real wheat/rye, artificial mashed potatoes in Belarus or artificial apple pies in Poland.
I could get the idea of selling instant coffee, or premixed cake mix, people are lazy and all that stuff. Also I understand that making ready beverages in bottles/cans from chemicals could be profitable, as they will have much longer shelf life than natural ones. But there is no any difference between making lemonade from a fresh lemon with spoon of sugar and making lemonade from that powder.
Does anybody really buy that stuff, or it is just occupy supermarket shelves since it have long enough shelf life and stores like long shelf life products?
Really, I don't see anything really harmful in the list of ingridients of that powder, titanium dioxide is just white pigment, naturally occuring in soil in noticeable amount, so you are daily breath it with soil dust while there are no rain. But the whole idea of making things like this lemonade powder makes me puzzled.
Titanium dioxide replaced the lead in lead paint. Lead was used primarily in white based paints.
As mustangjayyyme said, TD is primarily used to whiten things.
But, I would suspect a more nefarious use. Plain sugar can whiten the appearance of the powder. Real lemon juice tends to bleach out colors.