
Let's face it, chocolate is a lie I mean
not everything we call chocolate is real
chocolate. There are regulations that can
help understand what you're eating so it
can either be chocolate or compound
chocolate which tastes great too. By the
way, the main thing about real chocolate
is that it's made of cocoa mass and
cocoa butter. If the packaging reads
cocoa powder and vegetable fat sorry
it's only compound chocolate. The real
one should contain at least 35% cocoa solid and about 18% cocoa butter so if you have these two variations and try
them at the same time, you'll probably
find the compound one a bit tastier as
it has various flavorings and no wonder
compound chocolate seems to be way more popular than the real type.
First off, it's cheaper also it's easier to store as it tends not to melt at room
temperature. Oh right so what about white chocolate, is it real or compound? Actually it's neither; it's not even related to
chocolate while compound chocolate has
cocoa particles, white chocolate has zero.
Yep, it has cocoa butter but it's a bit
different. The cocoa butter doesn't give
it its signature flavor; also real chocolate contains certain compounds that trigger our brains making us happy.
As you might have guessed, white
chocolate can't do the same. Any Nutella fans in here? We all know it's hazelnut cocoa spread but have you ever wondered how many nuts each jar contains the company once provided official info on it stating that each jar contains about 50 hazelnuts that that may seem a lot but it only makes up about 13 of the whole content sugar and palm oil take first place making up 50 of all the content of Nutella fun fact here the original recipe was way more nutty Nutella was inspired by yandu Young the traditional Piedmont recipe it was changed several times over the last
couple of centuries at the end of 18th
century it was a blend of chocolate with
30 percent hazelnut paste ah and it had
several interpretations this early
Nutella prototype could be used as a
filling for chocolates or even eaten in
the form of bars the mid-20th century
interpretation had a whopping 71.5
percent of hazelnuts and only about 19.5
percent of chocolate now moving on to another global commodity I'm talking about coffee first things first let's debunk one myth there's no 100 decaffeinated coffee any coffee that has at least 97 caffeine
removed is already considered to be
decaf by the way there are a couple of
different ways of removing caffeine the
first method involves a special solvent
the coffee beans are washed in it and
once the caffeine is removed the solvent
gets washed off
The second method called The Swiss water process involves carbon dioxide or a
charcoal filter now here's a fun fact
your morning coffee is stewed fruit
coffee beans are a berry pit so it's
basically a drink made of berries
now for a bit of heartbreaking math
imagine that you have a bag of nachos or
chips and it costs you ten dollars do
you know how much you've paid for your
snack only about 1.40 where are the
eight dollars and sixty cents then and
paid for the air in the back research
revealed that there's a brand selling
mostly air and very few chips don't
worry not all the bags are that air
packed but still there's always way more air than snacks.
Instant noodles may not have any hidden lies, but they do have a pretty cool story. Let's kick off with myth debunking; they say instant noodles were invented in Japan, but it's not so. The modern variation is for sure Japanese, but the very first ancient prototype was invented in China. Those were noodles that were fried and then served in soup; there's a legend telling that a chef put the already cooked noodles to boil again to rescue them, and took them out of the pan and fried them in hot oil. The modern Japanese version was invented to prolong its food shelf life after several unsuccessful attempts. Momofukuando the inventor came up with a method of preserving noodles; they were processed in various ways, including steaming, dehydrating, frying in hot oil, and seasoning. Instant noodles were considered to be a luxurious product since they cost way more than the fresh noodles everyone was used to back then. We all love lemonade, and there are many variations of this drink today: pink lemonade has that nice color because of grape juice or added colorants, respectively.



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