Posted on 09/16/2019 2:49:02 PM PDT by Red Badger
Most people enjoy a scoop of delicious ice cream. But did you know that the popular dessert used to contain anal secretions from beavers? If you think thats stomach-turning, check out these other weird or even deadly ingredients found in common food products. Baguettes with a side of opium
Just last March, shoppers in France were warned against purchasing bread that contained a dose of opium. Health officials were puzzled about the unexplained presence of the drugs in poppy seed baguettes and ready-made sandwiches made from poppy seed bread.
Poppy seeds dont usually contain opiates and government investigators posit that a batch of seeds delivered to bakeries may have been contaminated from the latex sap of the plant that has alkaloids.
The investigators have yet to determine exactly how much of the popular sandwich bread was contaminated. One sandwich made from poppy seed bread could contain at least four milligrams (mg) of morphine, a dose equal to almost half a tablet of morphine sulfate thats administered to individuals diagnosed with cancer.
Experts warn that the contaminated poppy seed bread is unsafe to eat and may even cause addiction. Investigators are still working on identifying the source of the contamination, along with the companies supplied with the tainted batch of seeds. Allowable food defects
Common foods arent always prepared in sterile conditions. Its not uncommon for people to accidentally consume food with contaminants like feces, insects, mold, parasites, rodent hairs, and soil.
According to the Food and Drug Administrations (FDA) Food Defect Levels Handbook, some items have acceptable or non-hazardous levels of these undisclosed ingredients. To illustrate, two cups of cornmeal may contain at least five insects, 10 insect fragments, 10 rodent hairs, and five fragments of rodent feces. Ice cream with a splash of beaver secretion
Castoreum, a natural flavoring, is a thick and aromatic secretion that comes from the anal glands of beavers. This ingredient gives a vanilla flavor to certain dairy products and desserts.
Near the end of the 19th century, beavers were hunted almost to extinction due to the high demand for castoreum, which was used as a food additive and fragrance. German chemists came to the beavers rescue when they discovered that vanillin, one of the chemicals responsible for the taste of vanilla, can be obtained from coniferin in pine bark.
Synthetic vanillin makes up at least 94 percent of all vanilla flavoring used by the food industry, with natural vanilla extract accounting for most of the remaining six percent. However, castoreum is still used in limited quantities to flavor luxury foods and beverages. Cheese with stomach enzymes
Traditional rennet, another natural ingredient, is used to make cheese. It is derived from the mucous membrane of the fourth stomach (abomasum) of young ruminants like calves and lambs. (Related: Natural flavors are anything but.)
Cheesemakers use rennet to separate milk into curds and whey for a crucial stage in the manufacturing process. While some cheesemakers still use traditional rennet, others use alternatives made from bacterial fermentation, mold, and plants (e.g., ivy and nettles). Mad honey disease
Several members of the rhododendron genus of flowering plants produce grayanotoxins in their nectar.
These neurotoxic substances are collected by bees to make honey. Consuming this honey causes mad honey disease in humans. This contamination may result in negative side effects like hallucinations, nausea, and vomiting. Lethal pickles
Food preservation methods such as pickling are used to extend the shelf life of food. But did you know that improperly preserved food can promote the growth of Clostridium botulinum?
C. botulinum produces the worlds most toxic substances, collectively called botulinum toxin. The toxin is so fatal that a dose of two thousand millionths of a gram (2ng) is considered deadly. In comparison, the average lethal dose of potassium cyanide is at least a tenth of a gram.
Eating contaminated food causes botulism, a condition that stops your nervous system from functioning properly. This illness results in general muscle weakness, paralysis, or death.
Honey may contain C. botulinum spores and while they are rather harmless for most individuals, the immune system of young infants is almost ineffective against these bacteria. The spores can cause a related condition called infant botulism, which is one reason why many government agencies warn against giving honey to children younger than one year old.
Before you eat something, think about where your food came from. Check food packaging carefully to determine that youre buying products made with natural ingredients that are safe to eat.
Sources include:
TheConversation.com
Telegraph.co.uk
FDA.gov
Yeh,BUT...a new flavor of donuts showed up !!! LOL
What I want to know is who DISCOVERED that beaver anal secretions and calves fourth stomachs made things useful in food prep? Neither sounds like anything that would happen by accident, like letting the dough rise.
What I want to know is, WHO WAS THE FIRST PERSON TO TASTE THE BEAVER ANAL SECRETIONS?..............AND WHY?...............
Brave was he who first ate an oyster...................
More of the sicko millenial gross out schtik...
Castoreum, as you oughtta know, badger, is not “anal secretions.” It’s scent*-gland secretions from downbelow, but not anal.
(*Not truly scent-glands, because in a hyper-technical manner, they aren’t glands.)
“Brave was he who first ate an oyster...................”
Oysters were a staple for coastal Indians.
Beaver anal secretions?
So, companies producing ice cream hired & paid employees to collect anal secretions from beavers?
Were these beavers in the wild, or did the ice cream companies breed & raise them on special beaver farms?
Farm-raised beavers certainly would have made the anal-secretion-collecting process easier on the employees doing the collecting.
Sorry, Red Badger, I’m calling BS.
“Castoreum, as you oughtta know, badger, is not anal secretions. Its scent*-gland secretions from downbelow, but not anal.”
Anal can refer to ‘down below’.
No.
Look at all the beavers now standing at the front of the Target parking lot looking for handouts.
Now I know why I need more sandwiches.....
OK, that does it. I’ll never eat ANYTHING ever again. It’s just too dangerous to eat food. Thanks for giving us all these warnings.
Hmmm...choose your poison. Castoreum from beaver anal glands or coniferin from pine bark. Castor Oil is supposed to be good for you, so shouldn’t it follow that Castoreum must be good for you, too?
Ive heard a lot of latitude given to the large vats of peanut butter..pickles even worse.
I dunno, ice cream with anal secretions sounds like a big seller in areas like SF and NYC!
Here we go again.
About twice a year.
“Poppy seeds dont usually contain opiates...”
Well, yeah, some poppy seeds contain small amounts and folks have tested positive for opiates due to poppy seeds.
I don’t miss the castoreum in ice cream as much as I miss the dolphin meat in tuna.
But, maybe a little.
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