Secrets About the Food Industry They Don't Want You To Know

Chocolate topping on donuts in a candy workshop. And Hands of worker working with digital tablet check product on the conveyor belt in the beverage factory. Worker checking bottling line for processing. Inspection quality control
Cheapism / LuckyBusiness/istockphoto / Amorn Suriyan/istockphoto

Some Truths Are Better Left Untold.

Just remember the old saying that "ignorance is bliss." People started saying that whenever ago because it's really true. There are certain truths, hard and brutally eye-opening truths in this life, that we're simply better off not knowing about in the first place.

When it comes to the book of secrets that the food industry is keeping under lock and key (seemingly literally sometimes), there are some daunting revelations, to say the very least. Here are just a few food industry insights recently shared by Redditors.

An image of a group of bananas.
Stefan Tomic

There's Often Nothing Natural About Those Flavors.

Yes, as fate would have it, those allegedly natural flavors aren't so natural at all. Redditor u/irony_in_the_UK writes, "The "natural flavors" are just big jugs of glycerin with hyper concentrated flavoring in it. Banana flavoring is fairly flammable." So, don't go messing around with banana flavoring any time soon.

Pot of honey
Materio/istockphoto

Organic Honey May Not Be So Organic After All.

Take a deep breath. We know that wasn't an easy truth to digest. But Redditor u/toad__warrior writes, "Beekeeper checking in - there is no such thing as organic honey. I do not treat my bees with chemicals, but I have no idea where they get their nectar. A bee can fly up to three miles from a hive to get nectar. It is virtually impossible to guarantee they have not gotten nectar from a chemically treated source."

Chocolate topping on donuts in a working atmosphere in a candy workshop. Pastry, dessert, sweet, making
LuckyBusiness/istockphoto

Chocolate Covered Donuts Might Not Be So Covered In Chocolate..

It's all too much already. Alas, Redditor u/gil_beard writes, "When I worked at a mass production bakery the chocolate for the chocolate covered doughnuts came in giant frozen blocks of 4x4 pieces and contained no actual chocolate whatsoever. When unfrozen it was like some sort of nasty-smelling paraffin wax that I would break up with a hammer and place into a melter that would then pour over the doughnuts."

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An image of a customer putting their hand up to refuse more salt on their food.
frantic00/istockphoto

You Are Likely Eating More Salt/Butter Than You Signed Up For.

Yes, there could be a darker reason behind that headache that seems adamant about following you around more often than you'd ever have thought it could. Redditor u/Greylings writes, "The reason restaurant food tastes better than what you make at home is probably because it was drowned in butter or oil. Also MSG is in nearly everything. Totally safe and delicious. And it definitely isn't what is giving you a migraine. The fact you ate 4,000 calories and 3 times your daily salt intake is probably what gave you the headache."

Related: Is MSG Actually Bad for You? Here's Why the Flavor Enhancer Has a Bad Rap

An image of different kinds of cheeses that have been placed on a cutting board.
fcafotodigital/istockphoto

They Shouldn't Have Brought Cheese Into This.

We were having a hard enough time as it was, digesting the prior information. Now we bring cheese into the mix. Oh no. Redditor u/anon56778903276 writes, "A lot of the processed cheese and cream cheese is all the same recipe we just switch the labels and packaging for the different brands we run. Source: I work in a cheese factory in a company that services 75% of America's domestic market."

Related: The Funkiest Cheeses in the World

This article was originally published on Cheapism

Chocolate topping on donuts in a candy workshop. And Hands of worker working with digital tablet check product on the conveyor belt in the beverage factory. Worker checking bottling line for processing. Inspection quality control
Cheapism / LuckyBusiness/istockphoto / Amorn Suriyan/istockphoto

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