WEIRD OR WHAT

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Weird things you’re eating without realising and why

Toothpaste - Wikipedia

Unless you exclusively eat fruit and veg grown in your own garden, you’ll likely have ingested some pretty odd stuff following a trip to the supermarket. Here are seven of the strangest things you might have eaten, and a bit of the science behind them from Domestic Science…


1. Toothpaste

You might be forgiven for thinking that the minty flavour in your toothpaste comes from mint plants. But it’s more likely to have been made in a factory from turpentine, the stuff used to clean paint brushes. Don’t worry, the menthol molecules produced in this way are chemically identical to the ones extracted from mint plants, and the process can have a lower environmental impact than the intensive farming method that real mint requires.


2. Chewing gum

Chewing gum used to be made from tree sap - a natural form of rubber. But these days most manufacturers offer only synthetic rubber for all your masticating needs. And that’s made from petroleum. In other words, your chewing gum is extracted from beneath the earth’s surface and partly made of old dead dinosaurs.


3. Bread

If you’re the sort of person who gets their bread from an artisanal small batch independent bakery, you can skip this one. But if you’ve ever eaten mass-produced bread, you can be pretty sure it contained L-Cysteine. This molecule makes dough easier to handle on a massive production line. Traditionally L-Cysteine is extracted from duck feathers, hog hair, cow horns, sheep hooves and even human hair. Although there are now vegan versions, made from fermented plant matter, it’s likely you’ve had more than one loaf containing a dough relaxer that started life on a barbershop floor.


4. Vanilla ice cream

It’s rare to find it today but the vanilla flavour in ice cream was once enhanced with Castoreum, a substance that adds notes of musk and Russian leather to make fake vanilla taste more convincing. You’ll be pleased to know it’s mainly confined to the perfume industry now as the source of Castoreum is the beaver's castor sacs, located near the anus.


5. Low fat frozen yoghurt

The arctic-dwelling ocean pout fish produces a protein that stops its blood freezing when temperatures drop below zero. This “antifreeze glycoprotein” has been extracted, copied and added to low-fat frozen desserts like ice-cream and frozen yoghurt. It stops water molecules from freezing too fast, which means smaller ice crystals are formed in the mixture as it solidifies. That’s how to create a creamy taste without using real cream - use fish antifreeze instead.

and as always have a chilled day from the Viking

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