The Takeout on MSN
11 discontinued '90s 'junk food' snacks we miss
Picture the '90s, and among the grunge and mom jeans, you might find a few of these snacks, which became the lifeblood of ...
House Digest on MSN
Use a laundry room staple to DIY fake frost that looks like the real thing
There are many ways to make fake frost on Christmas decorations, including one especially easy method using the help of a laundry room staple.
Japanese people like to say that they “eat with their eyes,” relishing the colors, shapes, and textures of a dish before it ever hits the tongue. The phrase applies all the more when the dish in ...
Dr. Smith Taillie is a professor of nutrition at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and a director of the U.N.C. global food research program. When my daughter started kindergarten, I was ...
Authorities in Ukraine have uncovered the manufacture and sale of food products made to mimic well-known brands. Detectives from the Territorial Office of the Economic Security Bureau of Ukraine (ESBU ...
Welcome to Med Op-Ed, where we highlight recently published editorials. In this installment: Direct-to-consumer sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing may lead to gaps in public health; ...
(NEXSTAR) — As several companies gear up to drop artificial food dyes in the coming months and years, PepsiCo Foods is preparing to release “naked” versions of some of its most popular chips. “We’re ...
Doritos and Cheetos SIMPLY NKD are made with no dyes or artificial flavors. Some Cheetos and Doritos products will soon be available without bright artificial colors, but the the same iconic flavors.
North Carolina’s Attorney General is warning people about food drive scams as the demand for food goes up during the ongoing government shutdown. At the Council of State meeting on Tuesday, Jeff ...
The Trader Joe's "fake food" conspiracy sounds a lot more ominous than it is, which should come as a relief to anyone who's enjoyed the chain's flurry of constantly rotating in-house branded offerings ...
Don’t take a licking from spicy food. A team of researchers in China claims to have created an artificial “tongue” that can quickly detect spice levels in their food — and they used a well-known ...
The appearance of a hot sauce or pepper doesn’t reveal whether it’s mild or likely to scorch someone’s taste buds. So, researchers made an artificial tongue to quickly detect spiciness. Inspired by ...
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