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#1 |
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Switching from corn syrup to sugar makes Coke a carcinogen?!
![]() Kosher for Passover Coca-Cola has been barred from California. California’s new state laws on toxic chemicals are keeping kosher for Passover Coke out of the state, a company spokesman told the San Gabriel Valley Tribune. Coke was required to change the way it manufactures caramel due to the high levels of the chemical 4-methylimidazole, or 4-MEI, which California has listed as a carcinogen under its new guidelines. The manufacturing changes in California affected the kosher for Passover status of the cola, according to reports... source: http://forward.com/articles/154464/c...ver-coca-cola/ |
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#3 |
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#4 |
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Meh, just take out the toxic stuff and leave the corn syrup to be corn syrup, and all is well. Considering my wife wants me to give up Coke (cutting down to one bottle a week for Shabbat was the best I could do), she would be on California's side on this one (even if only for a week) |
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#5 |
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We can't have the corn syrup in Coke during Passover. That's why they switch to regular sugar. This isn't all Coca Cola, merely the special Kosher for Passover Cokes. Meat and Dairy and such is fairly obvious to me, but not this. |
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#6 |
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Do you mind my asking what the difference is? Both are basically processed sugars. All Jews are forbidden Chametz [leavened grains (barley, oats, rye, spelt, wheat) that have been leavened (come into contact with moisture and allowed to allowed to ferment or rise)] during Passover. Ashkenazi (Northern European) Jews are also prohibited Kitniyot (rice, buckwheat/kasha, millet, beans, lentils, peas, sesame seeds, mustard, corn, green beans, snow peas, sugar-snap peas, chickpeas, soybeans, sunflower and poppy seeds) for three reasons: 1. Kitniyot are harvested and processed in the same manner as chametz. 2. They are ground into flour and baked just like chametz [so people may mistakenly believe that if they can eat kitniyot, they can also eat chametz]. 3. It may have chametz grains mixed into it [so people who eat kitniyot may inadvertently be eating chametz]. source: http://www.30minuteseder.com/cook.html |
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#7 |
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It is not the final result, but the sources of these sugars that causes the distinction. |
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#8 |
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