Showing posts with label Starbucks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Starbucks. Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2012

Starbucks Frappuccino Is Dairy Free, Not Bug Free


Starbucks Frappuccino Is Dairy Free, Not Bug Free


Vegan Group Steaming Over Use Of Cochineal Extract In Chain's Beverages
March 29, 2012


Starbucks has drawn the ire of a vegan group that is upset over the revelation that some of the coffee chain's drinks may not be vegetarian-friendly -- since the drinks contain the extract of ground-up insects.


According to the Website, thisdishisvegetarian.com, a barista who works for a Starbucks store in the Midwest forwarded a picture of the ingredient list of the new strawberry sauce used in the chain's Strawberries & Crème Frappuccino as well as its strawberry smoothies.


The list revealed that the sauce contains cochineal extract or carmine -- a red dye made from the bodies of dried parasitic insects, also used in cosmetics, shampoos and other foods.


According to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, it takes as many as 70,000 cochineal beetles to extract enough red pigment to produce one pound of the dye.


The website reported that the barista who sent the picture said the recipe for the sauce must have been changed a few weeks ago -- in support of the company's efforts to offer dairy free drinks without artificial ingredients.


According to the Seattle Times, Starbucks spokesman Jim Olson confirmed that cochineal extract is used in some of the company's beverages.


"The strawberry base for our Strawberries & Crème Frappuccino does contain cochineal extract, a common natural dye that is used in the food industry, and it helps us move away from artificial ingredients," Olson said in a statement.


Cochineal extract is deemed safe by the Food and Drug Administration, but a small segment of the population is allergic to it. So the agency requires it to be listed on the label of all food and cosmetics produced in the U.S.
However, restaurants and cafes are exempt from displaying labeling on packaged food products.

Starbucks Strawberry Frappuccino ingredient 'bugging' some


Starbucks Strawberry Frappuccino ingredient 'bugging' some
Mar 29, 2012 
USA Today 
By Bruce Horovitz


Starbucks has the vegan community seeing red over what it recently began using to color its Strawberry Frappuccinos: beetles.


That's beetles as in ground up cochineal beetles - mostly found in Mexico and South America.


Gross as that may sound, it's a common, government-approved food coloring used widely throughout the food industry. It's in everything from some Yoplait yogurts to three Kellogg's Pop-Tarts flavors.


A Vegan website, ThisDishIsVeg.com, this month warned its readers that Strawberry Frappuccino was no longer vegan and now is using the beetles for coloring. Starbucks made the switch in January when it aggressively moved away from artificial ingredients.


For Starbucks, which is eager to get artificial ingredients out of its food and drinks, it's an unexpected PR problem. Never mind that Frappuccinos, in total, represent a $2 billion global business for Starbucks. "This is the quintessential modern day PR crisis," says PR expert Katie Delahaye Paine. "You try to be good and green, and someone is going to get you for it."


Daelyn Fortney, co-founder of the vegan website ThisDishIsVeg.com, was informed of the change by an anonymous Starbucks barista. She wants Starbucks to go back to using a vegan coloring like red beet, black carrots or purple sweet potatoes. She's posted a petition from her group on the website Change.org, under the heading, "Starbucks: Stop using bugs to color your strawberry colored drinks." Late Wednesday, it had 779 signatures.


"This was known as a drink that vegans can safely consume," she says. "We're not trying to cause any problems. Our point is, vegans are drinking this and it's not vegan."


But Starbucks says it's simply trying to do the right thing. "At Starbucks, we have the goal to minimize artificial ingredients in our products," spokeswoman Lisa Passe says.


Nutrition experts say it's the right idea, but the wrong execution. "Starbucks should be praised for getting rid of artificial ingredients," says Michael Jacobson, executive director at the Center for Science in the Public Interest. But since some folks have allergic reactions to insects, he says, "Strawberry Frapuccinno should be colored with strawberries."


Marion Nestle, professor of nutrition at New York University, says she's not concerned. "This is pretty far down on my list of outrageous food issues."