You Are What You Eat
You Are What You Eat
You Are What You Eat
1. High-tech tomatoes. Mysterious milk. Supersquash. Are we supposed to eat this stuff? Or is it going
to eat us? ~Annita Manning
2. It would be nice if the Food and Drug Administration stopped issuing warnings about toxic
substances and just gave me the names of one or two things still safe to eat. ~Robert Fuoss
3. You can do a lot for your diet by eliminating foods that have mascots. ~Ted Spiker
4. No, I don't take soup. You can't build a meal on a lake. ~Elsie de Wolfe (Lady Mendl)
5. As for butter versus margarine, I trust cows more than chemists. ~Joan Gussow
Now fill the gaps with some of the words given above. Change the verb form where necessary.
Neil ......................... that he broke the window, but I'm sure he did.
I've told her she should stay at home and rest but she's ........................ that she's coming.
You are what you eat – 7 most disgusting things that you have probably eaten this week!
Vanilla and raspberry flavors might be enhanced by "castoreum," a mixture of the anal secretions and urine of
beavers. It's also found in perfume.
The FDA-approved product is categorized under "natural flavoring," so you won't know if you're eating it.
After celebrity chef Jamie Oliver went on David Letterman's show and mentioned castoreum's presence in vanilla ice
cream—"If you like that stuff, next time you put it in your mouth think of anal gland"—manufacturers adamantly denied
the claims.
Isinglass, or dried fish bladder, gives beer its golden glow. The BBC did a whole segment on the substance, which is
primarily used in British beers.
Gelatin is made from collagen, which is boiled down animal connective tissue. Today, gelatin most likely is made from
pigskin.
Bread: Duck Feathers and Human Hair
L-Cysteine is an amino acid often used in dough conditioners, which softens mass-produced breads. It is made from
human hair or duck feathers. Although 80 percent of L-cysteine is made of human hair, McDonald's uses the duck
feather variety in its Baked Hot Apple Pie and Warm Cinnamon Roll.
Sodium bisulfite is used in most toilet boil cleaning agents. It's also used to extend the shelf-life and bleach out the
discoloration of potato chips.
We aren't saying that rat hairs are the secret ingredient of your favorite chocolate bars ... but they might make
accidental guest appearances. The FDA allows one rat hair per 100 grams in six 100-gram subsamples of chocolate
and 60 insect fragments per 100 grams in six 100-gram subsamples.
1. H
2. K
3. D
4. P
5. B
6. N
7. A
8. L
9. F
10. I
11. O
12. C
13. J
14. E
15. M
16. G
Neil denies that he broke the window, but I'm sure he did.
I've told her she should stay at home and rest but she's adamant that she's coming.