When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tartrazine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartrazine

    Products containing tartrazine commonly include processed commercial foods that have an artificial yellow or green color, or that consumers expect to be brown or creamy looking. It has been frequently used in the bright yellow coloring of imitation lemon filling in baked goods. The following is a list of foods that may contain tartrazine ...

  3. FDA may finally ban artificial red food dye from foods - AOL

    www.aol.com/fda-may-finally-ban-artificial...

    The FDA may finally move to ban artificial red food dye, the coloring found in beverages, snacks, cereals and candies. ... also known as tartrazine. Red No. 40, also called E129 or Allura Red AC ...

  4. 11 Popular Foods That Contain Harmful Dyes & Chemicals - AOL

    www.aol.com/11-popular-foods-contain-harmful...

    Food in its whole form is less likely to contain questionable ingredients. For example, whole fruits and vegetables, lean proteins, grains, and legumes undergo minimal processing with few to zero ...

  5. Dye in Doritos used in experiment that, like a 'magic trick ...

    www.aol.com/dye-doritos-used-experiment-magic...

    Tartrazine, a dye used in making Doritos, has a light-absorbing quality that researchers used to apply to mice so they could see through the skin. ... a bright yellow-orange food coloring used in ...

  6. List of allergens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_allergens

    A synthetic food dye used in processed foods like confections, soft drinks, flavoring syrups, condiments and convenience foods in order to create a potent yellow or bright green coloring. Prevalence of allergenicity is unclear but it is the most likely azo dye to cause hypersensitivity and reactions may occur from ingestion or skin contact.

  7. Sunset yellow FCF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunset_yellow_FCF

    In 2008, the Food Standards Agency of the UK called for food manufacturers to voluntarily stop using six food additive colours, tartrazine, allura red, ponceau 4R, quinoline yellow WS, sunset yellow and carmoisine (dubbed the "Southampton 6") by 2009, [14] and provided a document to assist in replacing the colors with other colors. [15]

  8. Ponceau 4R - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponceau_4R

    These concerns have led the FDA and other food safety authorities to regularly review the scientific literature, and led the UK FSA to commission a study by researchers at Southampton University of the effect of a mixture of six food dyes (Tartrazine, Allura Red AC, Ponceau 4R, Quinoline Yellow WS, Sunset Yellow and Carmoisine, dubbed the ...

  9. Common dye turns skin invisible to see the organs inside - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/common-dye-turns-skin-invisible...

    The dye is a food colouring called tartrazine, used it for its yellowish colour. But that same colour means that it absorbs light, especially blue and ultraviolet light.