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Wheat Thins Another one of America's favorite crackers is banned in Japan and Europe, but Wheat Thins are outlawed for a different off-limits ingredient: BHT, which as we mentioned earlier, is a ...
Wheat Thins is a brand of baked whole grain snack food crackers distributed in the United States and Canada by Mondelez International. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The product is also available in Australia through wholesaler USA Foods. [ 3 ]
In the U.S., the product is flavored with dehydrated cooked chicken, [2] but international formulations differ. In the United States, the Chicken in a Biskit and Swiss in a Biskit variants were part of a line of crackers known as Flavor Originals that included Better Cheddars, Sociables and Vegetable Thins.
The Shredded Wheat Company began producing Triscuit in 1903 in Niagara Falls, New York. [2] The name Triscuit may have come from a combination of the words electricity and biscuit [3] or the commonly held belief that "tri" is a reference to the three ingredients used (wheat, oil, and salt), [4] [5] but this is disputed due to conflicting adverts and poor records. [6]
And eating French fries without ketchup may seem strange, but in France, the condiment is banned in primary school cafeterias. Watch the video above to see what other unlikely things are ...
In Argentina and other Spanish language countries, bull's testicles are served as huevos de toro or 'bull's eggs'. In some regions, such as the European Union , brains and other organs which can transmit bovine spongiform encephalopathy ("mad cow disease") and similar diseases have now been banned from the food chain as specified risk materials .
This wrinkly legume from South America underwent a recent boom in the fine-dining world due to its notes of vanilla, almond, and cinnamon, but it has actually been illegal in the U.S. since 1954.
A sack of "pink grain". Note the labelling in Spanish, and the grain's distinctive orange-pink colour. The 1971 Iraq poison grain disaster was a mass methylmercury poisoning incident that took place in late 1971 where seed grain treated with a methylmercury fungicide, which was never intended for human consumption, was imported into Iraq from Mexico and the United States.