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9 commenti

  1. myredshoelaces on

    Frustrating that the actual product brands aren’t listed.

  2. ImprovementNo2185 on

    If people are still buying their children breakfast cereal in 2025, they need a slap.

  3. Key_Duck_6293 on

    Does the NGO or the Journal risk legal action if they say what brands had it?

    Consumers deserve to know if a toxic substance is in their food, should the FSA intervene?

  4. whooo_me on

    Give a man some chemicals to eat, he’ll have them in his system for a day.

    Teach a man to eat forever chemicals, he’ll have them for the rest of his life.

  5. qwerty_1965 on

    Well this is ambiguous. Purchased in Ireland doesn’t mean produced in Ireland.

    360 µg/kg in breakfast cereals (purchased in Ireland)

    340 µg/kg in Belgian wholemeal bread

    310 µg/kg in wheat flour (produced in Germany)

    210 µg/kg in a French baguette

    200 µg/kg in Swiss Rauchbrot

    180 µg/kg in a French croissant

    130 µg/kg in Dutch gingerbread (pepernoten) – a popular children’s treat at Sinterklaas (Saint Nicholas Day)

    120 µg/kg in Spanish toasting bread

    120 µg/kg in flour from Luxembourg

    74 µg/kg in Austrian breadcrumbs

    62 µg/kg in Polish spelt toast bread

    49 µg/kg in Bulgarian biscuits

    49 µg/kg in corn flour from Romania

    42 µg/kg in a Czech poppy seed bun

    31 µg/kg in Hungarian coarse oat flakes

    26 µg/kg in Italian spaghetti (the tip of the iceberg, only one sample tested)

    17 µg/kg in Greek rusks with olive oil

  6. Drakenstonks on

    Is eating breakfast a natural thing? I naturally don’t eat till 2 or 3 most days, never hungry in the A.M, but I’ve friends that are basically useless without an injection of carbs early

  7. BowensCourt on

    I KNEW there had to be some kind of addictive chemical in Wheetabix.

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