Well no more Mountain Dew for me(at least for now)

TeKPhaN

I deal in absolutes
Sep 11, 2013
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https://www.facebook.com/healthdige...44283.187938474672486/343086805824318/?type=1

http://www.popsci.com/blog-network/taste/why-would-you-put-brominated-vegetable-oil-soda


Why Would You Put Brominated Vegetable Oil in Soda?

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So Coke and Pepsi are rushing to remove brominated vegetable oil (BVO) from their drinks in response to consumer pressure. Some of the campaigns are predictably in terms of the ingredient having non-food uses (a fire retardant) make it inappropriate to use in food. However CSPI and others point to reasonable toxicological concerns and it looks like BVO is on the way out.

What was BVO doing in drinks in the first place? Why would soda contain any vegetable oil and why would you brominate it?

Soft drinks are basically acidified, sweetened water and many of the flavors and colors added don’t dissolve well in water. Instead they are first dissolved in vegetable oil then homogenized to make fine emulsion droplets (diameter typically less than a micrometer) usually stabilized with gum Arabic. The emulsion can be diluted down to low levels in the drink base (~0.02%) to add flavor and color. In some products the emulsion provides some cloudiness as the fine particles scatter light. The difficulty is soda has a long shelf life and the emulsion mustn’t break down.

The main means of physical instability in beverage emulsions is creaming. Because the oil in the droplets is less dense than the aqueous drink, they tend to float to the surface. The same mechanism is responsible for gas bubble floating up into surface of a glass of beer, but because the difference in density between oil and water is so much less than the difference between and air and water the process in the soda is much slower. Adding some bromine atoms across the double bonds of an unsaturated fatty acid increases the density of the oil and makes the creaming process even slower and the shelf life longer. There is a legal limit on how much BVO can be used (15 ppm although it is typically used at 8 ppm) and that isn’t enough to make the density of the oil as high as that of water so creaming may still be a problem. Other lipid soluble polymers (wood rosins, sucrose acetate isobutyrate) are used as well as or instead of BVO to further improve the emulsion stability.

A second way of controlling creaming rate is to keep the droplets small. The homogenization process makes fine droplets, but the oil molecules tend to diffuse from small droplets to large ones in a process known as Ostwald ripening. The average droplet size gets larger, and larger droplet cream much more quickly. It’s a big problem in beverage emulsions because the flavor oil molecules are more polar than a typical triglyceride and dissolve more in the water phase. Lipid soluble additives that are much less water soluble than the flavor oils (the vegetable oil, wood rosins or SAIB) slow Ostwald ripening. When the flavor oil diffuses out of a small droplet it makes the remaining oil more concentrated with respect to these other components. Concentrating a solution is opposed by the entropy of mixing which will slow and eventually stop Ostwald ripening. If the droplets stay small, they won’t cream out.
 
I don't drink Mt Dew (or really any soda) regularly anyway.
 
I thought veggies were good for you. ;)

Seriously though, Mountain Dew looks like radioactive goo that would glow in the dark. It just so happens I saw my doctor this morning and he was reviewing a nutrition log I turned in and the first thing he wants me to cut is the diet Mountain Dew...of all the things I'm doing wrong on my diet and and that was the #1 change I need to make. I think that says something in itself.
 
I used to be a diet mountain dewaholic until I heard from family and friends that the sweetener aspartame supposedly has a lot of negative side effects, I kept hearing aspartame was bad for the body worse than sugar or FCS so I eventually said F" it and went straight water, Now all I drink is Filtered water.
 
Wait, you're telling me that something called Mountain Dew isn't good for the human body? Wow, I'm just glad this one ingredient opened up the curtains to this whole thing. Now I know not to replace my Ice Mountain water coolers with Moutain Dew.
 
Mountain Dew is only for my extreme crazy gaming sessions (usually an all night Halo game launch or something).

Also, for those looking for less unhealthy soda/pop (sorry I'm in a pop part of the world), check out Sodastream. You make your own drinks and it has a lot less garbage than the name brands, plus it is way cheaper. I got it as a gift for Christmas and love it. They taste pretty comperable to the big brands too (I am not associated with them at all) :)
 
I used to enjoy Mtn Dew but now I couldn't drink it. Too fake tasting.
 
It blows my mind how much sugar is in pop!

That alone keeps me away.

But nothing wrong with having a can of pop a few times a year.

I love Dr. Pepper and Canada Dry Ginger Ale though can't lie! Coca Cola is good too o_O
 
Mainly Squash, water, milk, beer and the odd diet coke now and then.
 
It blows my mind how much sugar is in pop!

That alone keeps me away.

But nothing wrong with having a can of pop a few times a year.

I love Dr. Pepper and Canada Dry Ginger Ale though can't lie! Coca Cola is good too o_O
Dr Pepper is one of my favorites too. That and Root Beer. I rarely drink soda though. Only once in a while when I go to a restaurant.
 
I drink ~2 gallons of water a day (on weekdays).
 
I can't understand how any logical person would drink that crap any way, the amount of chemicals in those drinks cannot be good for the human body, not to mention the sugar overload. Its all about appealing to people who want taste and don't care about anything else.
 
I drink water 99 percent of the time and Milk and a sports drink the other 1%. I used to love pop now it taste like crap to me.