11 Of The Most Faked Foods In The World | Big Business | Insider Business

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  • čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
  • Hate to break it to you, but your truffle oil wasn't made from truffles. Your vanilla extract? Well, that's probably just a lab-made derivative of crude oil. And your shaker of Parmesan cheese? It probably has wood pulp inside.
    You might feel the companies behind these food products are using deceptive packaging - but it's legal. However, there's a whole other level of trickery that's completely illegal: food fraud. That's when criminals bottle up corn syrup and call it 100% honey, or when they pass off cheap mozzarella as pure Parmigiano-Reggiano.
    Globally, the fraudulent food industry could be worth $40 billion. It hurts legitimate producers, funds criminal activities, and can even harm consumers. We head around the world to uncover how producers get away with food deception and how we can spot the real stuff.
    0:00 Intro
    1:08 Truffles
    3:44 Maple Syrup
    5:19 Wasabi
    7:42 Parmesan Cheese
    11:15 Vanilla
    12:58 Caviar
    14:40 Honey
    17:30 Olive Oil
    20:04 Wagyu Beef
    22:20 Coffee
    24:05 Saffron
    25:58 How criminals get away with selling fakes
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    11 Of The Most Faked Foods In The World | Big Business | Insider Business

Komentáře • 8K

  • @Livlifetaistdeth
    @Livlifetaistdeth Před 8 měsíci +7817

    Anyone buying a Parmigiano shaker thinking it's real Parmigiano cheese has much bigger problems than believing their cheese is really authentic Parmigiano cheese.

    • @mandoist
      @mandoist Před 8 měsíci +329

      Any powdered "cheese" is merely cheese FOOD. Fake, fake, fake.

    • @omagoch
      @omagoch Před 8 měsíci +148

      Unless if it's actually dried powdered cheese, but if you're buying that, then you know what you're getting. The grated stuff is another beast.

    • @tompsheridantsheridant7354
      @tompsheridantsheridant7354 Před 8 měsíci +79

      ​@@aerialbugsmasherSOYLENT CHEESE

    • @dantekania7212
      @dantekania7212 Před 8 měsíci +122

      @@omagochgood and important distinction. You can buy real grated pamiggiano reggiano, but it will almost always be either freshly grated or frozen. It won’t be sitting at room temperature on a shelf

    • @cantthinkofausername8698
      @cantthinkofausername8698 Před 8 měsíci +191

      Maybe people dont care about cheese as much as you.

  • @tinybullfrog1955
    @tinybullfrog1955 Před 7 měsíci +2015

    As a person with severe allergies, the fact that the label can lie is probably the scariest part of this for me.

    • @kevinroylancephotography9437
      @kevinroylancephotography9437 Před 7 měsíci +39

      I combat this fear buy not outsourcing my control of food preparation to any 3rd party. I make sure to buy the expensive brand of olive oil because I'm allergic to soy and sunflower oils. I figure if it's expensive, it's probably legit. I also buy whole foods and make my own dishes from them.

    • @CosmicEternityCD
      @CosmicEternityCD Před 7 měsíci +50

      Same here. The day I found out olive oil could be mixed with soy oil was absolutely horrifying. And knowing now that honey can be mixed with corn syrup- It makes a lot of sense all of a sudden why I'd sometimes get sick after eating honey or using olive oil. Doing research helps... But sometimes, you have no way of knowing.

    • @illusorytrutheffect
      @illusorytrutheffect Před 7 měsíci +16

      @@CosmicEternityCDjust make sure you’re getting extra virgin olive oil from one country source, it’s more expensive but it’s honestly the only cooking oil safe to consume anyway. And with honey just get raw unfiltered. It’s more expensive also but taste great and has no additives. It’s literally collected directly from the honeycomb and bottled

    • @Warren-ec8oo
      @Warren-ec8oo Před 7 měsíci

      Probably from the illegal Nazi mandated vaccines that caused most of your problems. Only in Nazi fascist Corp owned weak divided aMErika of lies. Now mask up and obey slaves. LMFAO Operation Papererclip aMErika ?

    • @peter58peter
      @peter58peter Před 7 měsíci +11

      liemakers do not care about that part. Only money counts.

  • @mathiasm8489
    @mathiasm8489 Před 3 měsíci +1665

    Biggest problem is that misleading labels are legal.

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Před 2 měsíci

      Biggest problem is people are too stupid to have awareness and media competence

    • @jayyy5270
      @jayyy5270 Před 2 měsíci +29

      This just this.

    • @brahim119
      @brahim119 Před měsícem

      Because the politicians and regulators are corrupt.

    • @AceStrife
      @AceStrife Před měsícem

      And the FDA (US) is so corrupt they'd rather remove country of origin labeling and not require GM disclosure, because big business profit.
      Wish we could segregate this agency... Let them focus on their grossly profitable drug industry while another one who cares regulates our food industry. But as if that'll ever happen.

    • @larryjonn9451
      @larryjonn9451 Před měsícem

      Yeah, companies lie and manipulate us.

  • @offlineable
    @offlineable Před 3 měsíci +1273

    I honestly don't mind imitation products as long as they taste good and won't hurt me, but I DO mind is being lied to and potentially poisoned by greedy companies.

    • @secondary2nd
      @secondary2nd Před 3 měsíci +36

      Also nutrition value, I remember some cereal company add iron directly to cheat the nutritional value(not sure if it’s true or not)

    • @NaravishThongnok
      @NaravishThongnok Před 3 měsíci +61

      @@secondary2nd That's not a bad thing though. Mineral (including iron) deficiency is a very common problem, mainly because people don't care enough to manage their mineral intake. Food fortification (artificially add nutrient to food) is one of the way WHO recommends to combat this problem.

    • @cjay2
      @cjay2 Před 3 měsíci +7

      Great. You continue to eat your imitation products.

    • @KorriTimigan
      @KorriTimigan Před 3 měsíci +42

      ​@@cjay2Obviously imitation products can be terrible, but I simply don't see the value in something like real beluga caviar. If even experts struggle to tell the difference between real sturgeon eggs and an "inferior" product then why bother paying the enormous premium?

    • @tupums
      @tupums Před 2 měsíci

      Yap. Same with the vaccine scam enforcement and enormous vaccine injury statistics.

  • @Arqan93
    @Arqan93 Před 7 měsíci +4417

    My Grandfather is a hobbyist beekeeper. He generally has around 18 to 20 active beehives and specializes in raspberry honey, as there are large raspberry fields nearby. The honey his bees produce is unlike any other I have ever tried. It's almost as if you took the smell of a blooming raspberry garden and closed it in a jar. His bees produce around 300-350kg of that honey every year and it goes for around ~20$/kg, so it's really quite expensive. But it sells out so quickly, people make reservations 2 years in advance. It's completely worth it though - the taste is amazing and it will never spoil unless you contaminate the jar.
    Every summer I spend a weekend or two helping him maintain the apiary and it's such a relaxing experience. Over the last 10 years I got stung maybe a dozen times and I don't even bother with protective clothing. Bees really are precious critters and need to be protected.

    • @MerriBrownwing
      @MerriBrownwing Před 7 měsíci +159

      Luv bees and hope your family can continue this important and wholesome hobby, people today have to start supporting home grown, untainted (real) food! Thanks for telling us of your honey!

    • @nobelwarprize
      @nobelwarprize Před 7 měsíci +72

      Thanks for sharing your experience.

    • @Signal_Glow
      @Signal_Glow Před 7 měsíci +40

      What u2 are doing is obviously very important for the buyers, another aspect is the bees showing condition of the environment. Majority of honey sold in eastern and central EU countries is a "mix of honey from EU countries", that normally means something is wrong with it. I got two jars where ~50% of such honey evaporated when stored properly in a closed jar, beside not crystallizing properly and tasting too sweet. Inspections always find fake honey but nothing is done.

    • @eileendarling1093
      @eileendarling1093 Před 7 měsíci +42

      OMG, Raspberry honey is my favorite. Having a difficult time finding raw, unpasteurized Raspberry honey here in Maine.

    • @charlottebankston4408
      @charlottebankston4408 Před 7 měsíci +25

      Watching honey bees come and go from their hives calms my soul.
      I ❤🐝🐝🐝🐝

  • @josealfonsocontretas5724
    @josealfonsocontretas5724 Před 8 měsíci +2853

    Yes blame the consumer, it's all their fault, because they buy the stuff that's allowed to be sold to them. Let's not talk about the "alleged" corruption that allows the fake and poisoned food to be on store shelfs.

    • @eduardochavacano
      @eduardochavacano Před 8 měsíci +201

      Pretentious people who think they need Fungus oil on French Fries.

    • @josealfonsocontretas5724
      @josealfonsocontretas5724 Před 8 měsíci

      @@eduardochavacano sure the video is a little about those pretentious people, but don't miss the main problem, companies being allowed poison people because of "regulations". Capitalism.

    • @dcptiv
      @dcptiv Před 8 měsíci +100

      If the chinese stopped eating shark fin soup then no one would be cutting the fins off sharks & throwing the live bodies back.

    • @Sthanisn
      @Sthanisn Před 8 měsíci

      A chemist finds ways to cheaply replicate hydrocarbons and the liberals lose their minds because it’s not “organic”, even though that’s the scientific definition of organic

    • @happygardener28
      @happygardener28 Před 8 měsíci +7

      caveat emptor has been a valid standard even before written history.

  • @Munchbyte-goblin
    @Munchbyte-goblin Před měsícem +84

    the point about people not buying cheap crap would help, the problem with this is so many people have to buy cheap just to survive, they can't afford to choose.

    • @Coolbunny-
      @Coolbunny- Před 24 dny +5

      the other problem is cheap crap sold at the same price (or more) then the original product

    • @wittysass3812
      @wittysass3812 Před 19 dny +1

      Or just buy whole foods, affordable and they have no label. Problem solved

    • @Digital111
      @Digital111 Před 3 dny

      @@wittysass3812 That's not a possibility in a lot of places in the US.
      A lot of people live in food deserts so when they do their shopping they have to buy ultra-processed foods that won't expire until the next time they can visit the store again.

    • @wittysass3812
      @wittysass3812 Před 3 dny

      @@Digital111 most people live within a reasonable distance from a Walmart or similar grocery store, and then on top of that we have this invention called a refrigerator that keeps your food edible for quite some time. It’s complete nonsense what you’re saying.

    • @Digital111
      @Digital111 Před 3 dny +1

      @@wittysass3812 Did you even read my comment? I was talking about "Food deserts".
      Not everyone drives or can afford to. Not everyone is privileged enough like you to have a handy store nearby and access to reliable transport to said store... I suggest you read on "Food deserts" and I'll go read on that intriguing "refrigerator" device you just mentioned.

  • @petergrandien1440
    @petergrandien1440 Před 3 měsíci +171

    What is for dinner tonight honey?
    - Petroleum

    • @hardlife507
      @hardlife507 Před 25 dny +5

      😂

    • @steelhurricane4041
      @steelhurricane4041 Před 9 dny

      Yep. It's getting bad, even fake foods are expensive.

    • @lewis0705
      @lewis0705 Před 4 dny +1

      petroleum derived ingredients aren't dangerous. theyre only bad when not refined fully (and that does happen so it can still be a risk). it depends on the manufacturer

  • @alg003
    @alg003 Před 7 měsíci +6706

    Love that companies can just get away with literally false advertising and illegal practices with 0 consequences because of money

    • @Novastar.SaberCombat
      @Novastar.SaberCombat Před 7 měsíci +257

      Of course. Rich gotta rich. 💪😎✌️ Poor gotta serve and suffer.

    • @polcaltieri
      @polcaltieri Před 7 měsíci

      We paid a lot of taxes and government agencies don't do their work fine. It's disgusting!

    • @radiofreeacab
      @radiofreeacab Před 7 měsíci

      Capitalism is organized crime, attack wealth

    • @altsam9
      @altsam9 Před 7 měsíci +180

      Buyers need to take some accountability and read the ingredients list. It literally says: artificial truffle flavor.

    • @MostafaElSakari
      @MostafaElSakari Před 7 měsíci +102

      You don’t read the ingredients it’s on you

  • @kedeeky
    @kedeeky Před 7 měsíci +415

    I swear everything has just become so exhausting. No matter how known the deception is, we’re still left to foot the bill. The way that costs have gone up, this is an even more painful truth.

    • @faithbresciani9425
      @faithbresciani9425 Před 7 měsíci +40

      The prices are so high and the mental effort it takes to read every dang label is so exhausting

    • @renebleu8711
      @renebleu8711 Před 7 měsíci +14

      I’m annoyed tbh

    • @peter58peter
      @peter58peter Před 7 měsíci +6

      mafia has absolute control.

    • @widedog3210
      @widedog3210 Před 7 měsíci

      @@faithbresciani9425the yuka app helps a bit

    • @gohardorgohome6693
      @gohardorgohome6693 Před 7 měsíci +8

      they don't even regulate meth anymore - like how am I supposed to know if it is ok to smoke

  • @tuluva1
    @tuluva1 Před měsícem +108

    My professor quoted a line from Nepal, it says if you have no food on your table you have one problem but if you have food on the table you have thousands. This thing really hit me hard.

    • @sandycross4827
      @sandycross4827 Před měsícem +7

      Wow, that quote’s quite profound. Thanks for sharing.

    • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
      @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Před měsícem +2

      Huh, i think i get it but it isn't...... Hmm, life changing

    • @lewis0705
      @lewis0705 Před 4 dny +2

      why does that hit you hard? are you gonna stop eating food because it limits the amount of problems you have? lmao

    • @tuluva1
      @tuluva1 Před 4 dny

      @@lewis0705 By seeing your comment i understand that you have a less capable brain as compared to an average human being. If you don't understand what someone said please ask them to repeat it or clarify it, Thanks

    • @tuluva1
      @tuluva1 Před 4 dny +1

      @@lewis0705 This is the most stupidest thing someone said to me in weeks. Congratulations

  • @chronesrt2925
    @chronesrt2925 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Sounds to me like the biggest issue with 100% of all our imported products is the shipping and security. We just learned here in canada our ports have 5 people checking 550k containers a day so theres no way to be sure, not even checking labels. Noone can trust Anyone or anything nowadays.

  • @Self_Evident
    @Self_Evident Před 7 měsíci +2381

    A core problem is allowing terms such as "artificial flavor" and "natural flavor" as "ingredients" (and all their variations). A flavor, whether artificial or real, is NOT an ingredient - it is a property of an ingredient.
    Edit:
    I originally used the terms "artificial flavoring" and "natural flavoring", but a couple of comments pointed out that "flavoring" is not "flavor". So, I changed "flavoring" to "flavor" to be more grammatically consistent with the rest of the comment. However, "flavoring" _is_ also used in ingredients lists, and is just as wrong.

    • @newfellazlive
      @newfellazlive Před 7 měsíci +21

      Exactly

    • @darkenedpsynoid
      @darkenedpsynoid Před 7 měsíci +15

      Preach......

    • @darkenedpsynoid
      @darkenedpsynoid Před 7 měsíci +30

      One thing I have a problem with in ingredients nowadays is if you have a hard time pronouncing the f****** word it should definitely not be in the ingredients list

    • @Wipeout186
      @Wipeout186 Před 7 měsíci

      Worse are the all the fake sugars out there it's lethal to people and promoted as healthy for diabetic people what rubbish, or to lose weight when it does the opposite. What's worse is if all the damn products out there causing the issues we have would stop using corn syrup sugar and instead use actual real sugar.

    • @jeppeandersen9145
      @jeppeandersen9145 Před 7 měsíci

      That's a horrible argument,@@darkenedpsynoid. Nomenclature can quickly become very technical without being dangerous. For example 2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-5,7-dihydroxy-3-[(2R,3S,4R,5R)-3,4,5-trihydroxyoxan-2-yl]oxychromen-4-one which is a common polyphenol found in apples.

  • @marryc9394
    @marryc9394 Před 7 měsíci +765

    The worst part isn’t even the fact that it is literally fraud, but that committing the fraud hurts the industries that actually makes the real stuff, thus stunting their potential growth and the global supply of the authentic products. :/

    • @Arii_98
      @Arii_98 Před 7 měsíci +17

      People want cheap stuff.

    • @magdalenam363
      @magdalenam363 Před 7 měsíci +20

      Keep people living in poverty so they only buy the cheap imitations :(

    • @kiwibird8441
      @kiwibird8441 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Fake cheese is still cheese

    • @imaginitivity7853
      @imaginitivity7853 Před 7 měsíci +24

      I think the bigger issue is the totally unknown health impact of these adulterated products.

    • @mikabakker1
      @mikabakker1 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@magdalenam363 victim mindset

  • @jonnobarry4438
    @jonnobarry4438 Před měsícem +60

    My mom used to warn us about fake and harmful products in food. She learned this many years ago in college. Imagine a college teaching the dangers of fake vs real anything today.

    • @David-lb6uf
      @David-lb6uf Před měsícem +9

      I actually have to watch this video for college and then write something about it lol

    • @captaincake4331
      @captaincake4331 Před měsícem +6

      Colleges can't even figure out what a male or female is. They're doomed.

    • @floppavevo5920
      @floppavevo5920 Před měsícem +5

      Colleges do still teach that if it's important to the field your heading into. That's how everything in college works.

    • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
      @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Před měsícem

      ​@@captaincake4331 how did this happen

    • @paladinsmith7050
      @paladinsmith7050 Před 8 dny

      @@Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman Satan.

  • @aditya_baser
    @aditya_baser Před měsícem +15

    Thank you for making this video. Very informative. I had no idea about most of them.

  • @MrYfrank14
    @MrYfrank14 Před 7 měsíci +2186

    I remember years ago I started only buying peanut butter that contained peanuts.
    Family laughed at me.
    I didn't think expecting my peanut butter to be made from peanuts was unreasonable.

    • @jackd1582
      @jackd1582 Před 7 měsíci +161

      That contains ONLY peanuts

    • @grenadier6483
      @grenadier6483 Před 7 měsíci +32

      Cool story bro

    • @wadelewis3286
      @wadelewis3286 Před 7 měsíci +231

      The grocery store in the last city I lived in, had a peanut butter grinder in the store. Was great to just take a couple cups of peanuts and making your own peanut butter, and they didn't really charge much more than the peanuts themselves, so it was actually cheaper than getting a classic jar.

    • @BarryPiper
      @BarryPiper Před 7 měsíci +54

      What does your family think peanut butter is made from, if not peanuts?

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Před 7 měsíci +91

      @BarryPiper - read a jar of peanut butter from a major manufacturer.
      If you are lucky, peanuts will be one of many ingredients.

  • @SutekhTheDestroyer
    @SutekhTheDestroyer Před 8 měsíci +861

    I was once given a jar of homemade honey by a customer of mine. He had a huge garden, full of many beautiful varieties of flower, and the honey the bees made from them had a wonderful, floral aroma. There really is no substitute for the real thing.

    • @laurac5451
      @laurac5451 Před 7 měsíci +31

      I buy real maple syrup because I hate the corn syrup masquerading as maple flavored syrup

    • @j4ck2000
      @j4ck2000 Před 7 měsíci +23

      I bought natural honey from my friend's brother in law who is a small producer. What I remember, the stock is not always available for sale. The aroma, taste and viscosity are not the same for different bottles.

    • @tedreid1035
      @tedreid1035 Před 7 měsíci +10

      It’s readily available in my neck of the woods. I know of three backyard producers within a 2 mile radius.
      $20 a quart.

    • @andrewclarke8163
      @andrewclarke8163 Před 7 měsíci +11

      ​@@laurac5451I honestly enjoy the fake table syrup, but yeah it tastes very different from real maple syrup.
      Lots of people I know are in the same boat as you. They love the real stuff and hate the fake stuff.

    • @mrb2643
      @mrb2643 Před 7 měsíci +16

      Bottled Spring water.... thats a firehose tap filling your stuff

  • @MeganKugs
    @MeganKugs Před 3 měsíci +53

    I absolutely adored the woman talking about honey, what a little sweetheart! Great information and sense of humor. 💜

    • @nick-vv1lz
      @nick-vv1lz Před 25 dny +1

      I found her insufferable

    • @user-ym4xy6us5e
      @user-ym4xy6us5e Před 5 dny

      It's true that commercial honey consists of the locally legally mandated minimum of actual honey, and that the rest is filler. Always buy from your local farm if you want the real stuff.

  • @randomgirl01300
    @randomgirl01300 Před 7 měsíci +1180

    I hated "cheese" most of my life, until I was 19 and someone gave my dad authentic parmegiano reggiano. Everyone else said it tasted bad and I didn't want it to go to waste so I tried it. Omg. Changed my life. I actually do like cheese. Just not the processed kind. It's life changing

    • @herekittykitty9324
      @herekittykitty9324 Před 7 měsíci +59

      All cheese is processed.

    • @RaiiiL
      @RaiiiL Před 7 měsíci +162

      @@herekittykitty9324 hes talking about the ingredients. Some are made of milk some of water and powders and chemicals

    • @Nikki_the_G
      @Nikki_the_G Před 7 měsíci +139

      @@herekittykitty9324 You think you are being clever but you aren't.

    • @patrickd9551
      @patrickd9551 Před 7 měsíci +21

      It hugely depends on where you live. I personally live in the Netherlands and cheese is our staple food.
      Sure we have a lot of cheap cheese and personally I find most of them just bad and plastic-like of texture. I get my cheese from the local farmer or cheese shop and boy oh boy does it taste different once you get your hands on the real stuff.
      But the fun thing is americans can even commit murder for the cheapest of plastic cheeses. When I go to the states I always bring a few cheeses with me, including the cheap stuff, so once they confessed to commit murder for the cheap stuff I will pull out the aged stuff and the farmer stuff. I usually bring around 1 kilo (2 lbs) with me, but once people realize the quality they do some quick math and consider me rich, bring over 100 dollars worth of cheese while I only paid 15-20 euro in total.

    • @herekittykitty9324
      @herekittykitty9324 Před 7 měsíci +17

      @@Nikki_the_G Are you saying someone has to be clever to know all cheese is processed? Smh.

  • @manuelsanchez064
    @manuelsanchez064 Před 7 měsíci +850

    My mom was received a rare gift of authentic extra concentrated Dominican vanilla.
    It had no fillers and processed and produced in a way that it's natural sugars prevented it from going bad if fridged,
    the thing was so highly concentrated if you pour more than one or two drops into the milkshake blender it was too much flavor!
    I grew up with it, It lasted 10 years in my fridge, I'll probably never actually taste real vanilla ever again.

    • @Cat-ic3df
      @Cat-ic3df Před 7 měsíci +86

      It's really easy to make your own vanilla! You gotta find real vanilla beans but you can find them in specially ingredient shops! Lots of videos on CZcams in how to make it

    • @MichelleOtt-cb1gh
      @MichelleOtt-cb1gh Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@Cat-ic3df up

    • @PaolaRodriguez-rd2qi
      @PaolaRodriguez-rd2qi Před 7 měsíci

      @@Cat-ic3dfdoesn’t it take months?

    • @user-lj2my3vb3u
      @user-lj2my3vb3u Před 7 měsíci +3

      You can harvest eggs without killing fish

    • @saturday1066
      @saturday1066 Před 7 měsíci +4

      wow. (what a deeply stupid lie.)
      HOW was this "extra concentrated" labelled that she KNEW it "had no fillers"? or that it wasn't "processed or produced in a way that it's natural sugars prevented it from going bad if fridged"?
      was this in the mail, this "extra concentrated" Dominican vanilla?
      or was it in person?
      inquiring minds need to know.

  • @kurtmagnus5243
    @kurtmagnus5243 Před měsícem +26

    As a beekeeper I understand what they’re talking about when they say you have to have patience. I don’t really get much honey but when I do, it’s wonderful when I sell it to my customers and they tell me that it is the best honey that they’ve ever tasted. I didn’t even know that China was the largest producer of Honey in the world

    • @hokehinson5987
      @hokehinson5987 Před 21 dnem +1

      Sad affair wasn't honey imports from China banned because they were exporting 3rd grade honey cut with HFCS into America trying to destroy our domestic honey industry? So the egg heads in D.C. passed a law no imports from china...problem solved right? WRONG...China sells this fake frankin honey all over the Globe to countries who have importation privileges. It's labeled as import from, Brazil, Canada, Eastern Europe, turkey, and people pay top dollar for Chinese dung honey....good job america 😢...support your local beekeeper & gunfighter😉👌

  • @Mumble8988
    @Mumble8988 Před měsícem +3

    My family looks at me like I'm clinically insane for reading ingredient labels. "Most people don't look at food labels" well, maybe most people Should.

    • @JAM661
      @JAM661 Před dnem

      I read food label. In the USA food is marked but it is up to you to learn about it and it is not that hard to get yourself better educated on this. But most American just care about the taste and really do not care but to blame other when they body finally say enough.

  • @elyssa.cranford
    @elyssa.cranford Před 7 měsíci +1241

    The weirdest thing about the whole fake syrup thing is how they managed to convince all of us that syrup tastes like pure sugar. I had REAL maple syrup for the first time a few years ago and had no idea it tasted so different

    • @MisterMister5893
      @MisterMister5893 Před 6 měsíci +52

      It tastes different but I wouldn't write it off as not tasting like sugar. Sugar is perhaps the most prominent ingredient in most people's diet. Either through processed grain breakfast cereal, soda pop, ice cream and an endless list of processed assortments. Literally everything we buy and eat from the grocery store has added sugar. Your taste buds have become accustomed to the taste profile. And while maple syrup do have its distinct taste, it isn't too far from regular sugar when incorporated into recipes. I've taken to using maple syrup in my coffee and you know, it doesn't taste that different from the white powdery stuff. I only notice it on my grocery bill.

    • @Mikelaxo
      @Mikelaxo Před 6 měsíci +52

      Same. Real maple syrup has a very distinct taste that I had never seen in any fake syrup. Also I thought it was common sense to people that most of the syrup in super markets is not real maple syrup

    • @sanniepstein4835
      @sanniepstein4835 Před 6 měsíci +9

      Maple candy is usually real, I think. That creaminess requires no additives--it just happens when you reduce the syrup.. Amazing.

    • @anthonydelfino6171
      @anthonydelfino6171 Před 6 měsíci +21

      I've had both, and sure I can taste the difference. But who cares? The knockoff stuff is close enough and more importantly is affordable for the average consumer in a way that authentic maple syrup would not be if that became the only available product.

    • @justforplaylists
      @justforplaylists Před 6 měsíci +11

      Maple syrup can also vary a lot in taste. Like, golden is very different from dark.

  • @sircrittalotTV
    @sircrittalotTV Před 7 měsíci +1410

    It seems to me that a core problem of the US food industry is ambigous labeling because of non-existing regulation. What an easy problem to fix, such a shame.

    • @AlphaG33k1
      @AlphaG33k1 Před 7 měsíci +79

      I think the regulations are there. It's just that the FDA doesn't do anything to enforce the regulations, they just take money to look the other way.

    • @mb7196
      @mb7196 Před 7 měsíci +67

      Well, that's what happens when so many americans have an irrational fear of "big government", but then let their big government cave to corporations. Propaganda has made americans think that regulations and social welfare = big government when the fact is big government really means giving welfare tax dollars to billionaires. Americans are totally OK with that. In bizzarro land, that = small government.

    • @hidankakuzu6052
      @hidankakuzu6052 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I believe the cat. There are regulations but it boils down to the enforcement. However, these "fakes" thrive because of the consumers.

    • @x--.
      @x--. Před 7 měsíci +5

      I'd vote for this; and for a real food enforcement agency. Hell, they could be LAFE - Label And Food Enforcement.

    • @gailsawyer
      @gailsawyer Před 7 měsíci +13

      The ambiguous labeling comes from being required to label. They obfuscate by using catchwords like “natural”-well Poison ivy is natural also, but I wouldn’t put it in my mouth. And anything that says “and other flavors” is hiding something. Add to all that, the size of printing on the labels now make them almost impossible to read!

  • @seamstressajm
    @seamstressajm Před měsícem +12

    I started making my own chocolate fudge sauce because all the store brands are now using high fructose corn syrup. The Aldi brand was the last one to cave. When I started buying it a few years ago, it listed just sugar, but now it has HFCS in the ingredients. I look at all labels now to avoid that ingredient in my diet. I think it’s one of major causes of the mass obesity in our country.

    • @user-ym4xy6us5e
      @user-ym4xy6us5e Před 5 dny

      Eating too much is the cause of obesity. Don't be a goddamned pig. Exercise restraint.

  • @toxikwastedump
    @toxikwastedump Před 3 měsíci +4

    lol real maple syrup costs WAY MORE than $10 for even a small bottle now.

  • @jj6282
    @jj6282 Před 8 měsíci +502

    What's allowed in our food in the US should be criminal. The revolving door of "experts" from the food manufacturing industries, healthcare, and the FDA is laughable and sickening at the same time. Reading labels is all on you at this point. Even then you can't be certain that you are getting is real and safe

    • @emerygray5945
      @emerygray5945 Před 8 měsíci +35

      Agreed. I was looking at getting some cottage cheese. Blew my mind that it had titanium dioxide listed as an ingredient.

    • @allesasmart
      @allesasmart Před 8 měsíci +13

      Heard "China" a lot

    • @rustbeltrobclassic2512
      @rustbeltrobclassic2512 Před 7 měsíci +7

      I'm allergic to PEG it's in a ton of things, and the FDA allows for companies to not mention it, if it's under a certain amount.. though even a little bit causes my blood pressure to drop and heart palpitations..

    • @allesasmart
      @allesasmart Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@rustbeltrobclassic2512 what is PEG?

    • @rustbeltrobclassic2512
      @rustbeltrobclassic2512 Před 7 měsíci

      @@allesasmart Propyl ethylene Glycol, basically antifreeze.. it's used to lower the freezing point of foods in the USA and also in a lot of drugs.. Covid vaccine.. Robitussin, and many, many more.. It's banned in other countries.. but not in the USA

  • @utmostkibbles9125
    @utmostkibbles9125 Před 7 měsíci +347

    As a Vermonter, I would rather die than consume imitation syrup. Fun fact: Vermont is the only state in the US where Ihop serves real syrup because it's illegal to label anything as "maple" if it doesn't contain pure maple syrup.

    • @T0tenkampf
      @T0tenkampf Před 7 měsíci +7

      nice, I have purchased some real maple syrup from canada but will look for vermont now. Its shockingly better, even more so than the difference in real honey and store bought.

    • @utmostkibbles9125
      @utmostkibbles9125 Před 7 měsíci +13

      ​@@T0tenkampf My gf is from Alabama and had only ever had fake syrup before meeting me, which had led her to believe she hated maple syrup. I introduced her to REAL syrup and it has changed her life xD
      I like Grade A syrup (which is what you'll commonly find in stores) but if you can find Vermont Fancy grade (aka: Golden and Delicate), it's really worth a try!

    • @rachelbuchanan9945
      @rachelbuchanan9945 Před 7 měsíci +10

      I wish more states would pass that law.

    • @williammerkel1410
      @williammerkel1410 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Outside of the places that produce it, real maple syrup is often prohibitively expensive, and even when we visited northern New York state it was still expensive.

    • @sigaries4062
      @sigaries4062 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Do you do zelle? I'm stuck in Washington state..lol. Maybe we do some tradezies😂

  • @PivotPixie
    @PivotPixie Před 2 měsíci +3

    Thank you soooooooo much for this!!!

  • @trosebtc2432
    @trosebtc2432 Před 28 dny

    Thanks always appreciate your work. And it’s free. 👊🏼

  • @taniasalu2405
    @taniasalu2405 Před 6 měsíci +1087

    I discovered, by accident, our family farm in Croatia grew truffles. We were talking about porcini's, which grow there in that tegion, and my father mentioned 'we grow those other mushrooms too, you know the ones pigs go crazy for.' He said they used to let the pigs dig them up and eat them because nobody in the family liked those black 'smelly' mushrooms. The look on his face was priceless, after I explained just what they were, and their monetary value.

    • @LuseGoose
      @LuseGoose Před 6 měsíci +28

      They sell them now?

    • @taniasalu2405
      @taniasalu2405 Před 6 měsíci +167

      @@LuseGoose nah, we don't farm the land anymore. And my relatives are a bit too old to be wandering the forest looking for fungi. Every now and then some will go hiking and find them but they're not sold off, just eaten.

    • @JoelDiNicolol
      @JoelDiNicolol Před 6 měsíci +91

      How about the look on YOUR face when he described wild black truffles so flippantly. Interesting story. You've probably enjoyed some fabulous fungi back on your family's land in the old country.

    • @taniasalu2405
      @taniasalu2405 Před 6 měsíci +79

      @@JoelDiNicolol I did get treated to fresh porcini's after a day of hunting near the village of Rogi. They're called varganji there and were made into a thick stew. And yes, dollar signs did disappear before my eyes when I heard only the pigs got to enjoy those 'smelly' black mushrooms!

    • @JoelDiNicolol
      @JoelDiNicolol Před 6 měsíci

      I am so envious when i see those who seek truffles as an occupation handling a nice-sized black one. I'm glad for you that you had the opportunity to experience hunting them with your family on the old farm. Priceless. @@taniasalu2405

  • @vampiricicarus979
    @vampiricicarus979 Před 8 měsíci +283

    I know many people don't have this ability, but most farmers markets have a "bee guy" or gal who sells high quality honey. A maple syrup farmer as well is pretty common. Support your local people if you want real products, and you'll get some quality stuff. :)

    • @wolfee904
      @wolfee904 Před 7 měsíci

      Yeah your local farmer's market ... where the bee charlatan buys the cheapest honey available from a discount store squirts into canning jars and sell for some outrageous price along with all the other items you know are also straight from the discount store cheap junk coffee poured into some hippie looking pouches tied with brown string and sold for 30$ a pound ... ah yes the beloved farmers market hilarious to walk through and watch these huckster thieves at work

    • @silentferret1049
      @silentferret1049 Před 7 měsíci +10

      Yeah you can also get some cut down stuff from them too. Look at Moonshine and how badly it can be from locals. Local does not guarantied to be all that it should be.

    • @doesnotexist6524
      @doesnotexist6524 Před 7 měsíci

      I would support my local apiarist who lives across the street from me if he wasn't a total retard lobbying for the protection of invasive Brazilian pepper, which produces mountains of honey that is absolutely disgusting.

    • @vzvish
      @vzvish Před 7 měsíci +4

      Yes choose local. One of India's leading Dietician always recommends eating locally available food on daily basis. Once in a while you can taste global products (which usually needs lots of preservatives & processing).

    • @physics77guy
      @physics77guy Před 7 měsíci +1

      there is a documentary about that too, you will be surprised what you will see

  • @GatochanBolivia
    @GatochanBolivia Před měsícem

    I just found your channel and i think its amazing :3 keep the good job guys, im suscribed now and give you a like :)

  • @AmirEdwards-sb3ky
    @AmirEdwards-sb3ky Před měsícem

    The recipe is amazing! Easy to make and the result exceeded all expectations.

  • @PlasmicPenny
    @PlasmicPenny Před 7 měsíci +150

    “The food we eat is the only drug everybody takes every day” sums it out perfectly.

  • @GruppeSechs
    @GruppeSechs Před 7 měsíci +190

    This kind of thing pushes me closer and closer to growing my own food. You just can't trust large organizations to do anything honestly anymore.

    • @lightscameraashish
      @lightscameraashish Před 7 měsíci +4

      I would want to believe seeds would be organic!

    • @aminahussain8690
      @aminahussain8690 Před 7 měsíci +7

      you never could. victorian bakers would mix in chalk with the flour and the poor obviously didn't question it.

    • @GruppeSechs
      @GruppeSechs Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@aminahussain8690 Well sure, but I mostly meant that we live in a time where we rely on outside sources for ALL of our food needs in today's world and you can't really trust any of them.

    • @aminahussain8690
      @aminahussain8690 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@GruppeSechs yeah agreed. sprechst du Deutsch?

    • @ancalyme
      @ancalyme Před 7 měsíci +2

      Good luck growing truffles, coffee and wagyu beef 😅

  • @k.g.1259
    @k.g.1259 Před 2 měsíci

    Great show !! It was as though the background was from an episode of Modern Marvels, while the corruption was from a 60 Minutes investigation 👍

  • @sharyngilding9525
    @sharyngilding9525 Před měsícem

    Thank you so much for these insights. I’ve recently come to the painful conclusion that my daughter is very toxic and manipulative. And while I’ve felt this for a long time I’ve tried to keep the peace for the kids. But after this last experience I have to keep my distance for my mental health. I thank you again for your content. Look forward to more. ❤

  • @GinsuSher
    @GinsuSher Před 7 měsíci +633

    I've once had the opportunity to get freshly harvested natural honey. The guy who gave it to me found a really large beehive in the jungle and bottled half of the honey. He had enough to give away to the whole neighborhood AND their guests. Really really different texture from all the fake honey found in supermarkets.

    • @pennyk1943
      @pennyk1943 Před 7 měsíci +46

      SURE HE FOUND THE LARGE BEEHIVE🤨,you mean he may have stolen the honey from a bee harvester that places the bee hives in the forest. There are many thieves stealing honey from beekeepers. Sometimes other beekeepers May steal. I’ll give them the benefit of doubt that this person didn’t steal the honey! Just saying!

    • @marcr1333
      @marcr1333 Před 7 měsíci +17

      Not defending fraudsters but when you bottle 100s of thousands of a product. They usually mix different batches together to achieve one base taste. Minute Maid orange juice…. If you look how it’s manufactured it’s both amazing and concerning.

    • @mikeries8549
      @mikeries8549 Před 7 měsíci +4

      ​@marcr1333 how did you get from honey to orange juice?
      Random much?

    • @waitingforwhoasked6403
      @waitingforwhoasked6403 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Using it as an example of course.

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Most honey found in supermarkets contains little, if any, honey.
      I buy mine from an organic market that buys it from a local farm. Nothing in it but honey.

  • @ShadowClone1989
    @ShadowClone1989 Před 7 měsíci +300

    The thing is also: I'm sure many people would love to be able to pay attention to this instead of the price tag. But fact is, that a lot of people can't afford to do that and are stuck with these potentially harmfull products. Especially something as basic as Honey or Coffee.

    • @tapwater424
      @tapwater424 Před 7 měsíci +15

      You call honey and coffee basic but they have been luxury products for most of their history. If you want something cheaper than honey buy syrups instead.

    • @ShadowClone1989
      @ShadowClone1989 Před 7 měsíci +14

      @tapwater424 I'm talking about today. Coffee and Honey are readily available almost everywhere. Plus if you're going to mention syrups: One of the main compounds of syrup is sugar. Sugar was also a big time luxury product, that only the richest could afford.

    • @tapwater424
      @tapwater424 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@ShadowClone1989 which is why I wouldn't be shocked if I ordered a sugar barrel for 2 goat skins and a brick in 1782 and it was filled with saw dust.

    • @hopsymopsy8352
      @hopsymopsy8352 Před 7 měsíci +19

      ​@@tapwater424poorer people are the ones working laborious and most times dead end jobs because they aren't afforded certain opportunities in America; these are the people who are more likely to want things like coffee because they get up at 4 a.m. to work the checkout at Walmart for 12 hours or honey for their tea because their sick from stress and overworking but your attitude screams that you don't think poor people should be alloted the opportunity to have those types of products just because they're poor? The FDA should be making stricter laws and cracking down on these things because if they did it would make the healthy and authentic stuff more readily available and thus cheaper and healthier for consumers. It isn't the consumer's fault that they're being tricked and often times forced into buying harmful foods due to their economic status and they deserve the opportunity to have access to foods that aren't made to trick them.

    • @grittykitty50
      @grittykitty50 Před 7 měsíci +9

      @@hopsymopsy8352 Your logic is flawed. I think if you are low income, you should be seeking out nutricious foods that you can afford. High priced items like extra virgin olive oil, truffles, and caviar should not even be on your radar. As far as "needing" coffee or honey because you work a shit job at Walmart is ridiculous. There are other, more economical products that can be used to maintain health. I don't know anyone at my job (I work one of those shit jobs) who is using honey because they are stressed or overworked. Most of my co-workers PREFER cheap junk food from KFC or McDonald's. Fact is, luxury foods ARE FOR THE RICH. Regular folks have to stick to regular food and just do some research to choose what's most nutricious for their income level.

  • @E-Kat
    @E-Kat Před 21 dnem +1

    Gosh, I used to eat truffles for breakfast when I was a child. A whole plate of it, with scrambled eggs and I didn't know they were so expensive. My dog was finding them for us and we had more than we could eat, so my grandma would dry the surplus mushrooms. 😊

  • @sativaoryza8648
    @sativaoryza8648 Před 7 měsíci +199

    IF you entered agriculture course in University, this is a question that will sometimes pop in your head.
    "This stuff is extremely hard to cultivate. how the hell can we meet demands of hundreds of tonnes of that product in a month or year ?"
    I tried asking my teachers and professors and this video is pretty much what they said.

    • @deyaniraletusworktogether
      @deyaniraletusworktogether Před 4 měsíci +7

      I’ve never taken an agricultural course but have wondered the same thing…

    • @barbram8001
      @barbram8001 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@deyaniraletusworktogether Me too, the same way I used to wonder, about Santa Claus.

  • @cinna-manspice4449
    @cinna-manspice4449 Před 7 měsíci +459

    I was shopping with one of my roommates one day, and she bought the bear jar that said 100% honey. She said she only gets REAL honey, so I flipped the jar and read the back ‘clover extract, and corn syrup.’ I told her “If the honey has no crystals in it; it’s definitely not honey.”

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před 7 měsíci +43

      But the bear is so cute!

    • @cinna-manspice4449
      @cinna-manspice4449 Před 7 měsíci +80

      @@Sashazur nah, that bear wants you to die from diabetes. That bear isn’t environmentally friendly at all unlike the natural ones either.

    • @laughdisable5397
      @laughdisable5397 Před 7 měsíci +11

      What even is clover extract?
      okay I googled it but it still baffles me

    • @chuckt7636
      @chuckt7636 Před 7 měsíci +146

      As a beekeeper I can tell you that freshly harvested honey will have no crystals. Crystallization won't start until about 8 months later. Plus store bought honey that has been pasteurized is just not worth paying for even if it is pure honey because all the health benefits have been destroyed. For the couple bucks more (I sell 1 lb of honey for $10) go to your local beekeeper. I don't make money from selling honey if you offset it with my costs, I keep bees because I love the hobby. And the bees!

    • @robertcarter8600
      @robertcarter8600 Před 7 měsíci +20

      @@chuckt7636 May God bless you, sir.

  • @lindapelletier
    @lindapelletier Před 2 měsíci +4

    Very interesting. Thanks for the tips of what to look for when you're not sure if something is real. What really scares me is when they mentioned that they could cut olive oil with peanut oil. Some of us have allergies to peanuts and all nuts for that matter. Death is something that can happen when you don't know what is in it. I hope they can do something to find the fakes. If the labels are not listing everything, it's dangerous.

  • @user-pr4gy8ij2p
    @user-pr4gy8ij2p Před měsícem +2

    its beautiful and very informative!!))

  • @giwrgostsirikoudis6799
    @giwrgostsirikoudis6799 Před 7 měsíci +310

    As a Greek (who has olive trees ) i will say that extra vergin olive oil has a realy nice aroma that when you smell it you will think : man that smells is so good that i want to drink it right now. Most of the oils you will find at supermarkets smells awful.

    • @Gilvids
      @Gilvids Před 6 měsíci +8

      Smell is subjective

    • @geneticallymodified7775
      @geneticallymodified7775 Před 6 měsíci +10

      Unpopular opinion: Supermarket extra virgin olive oil isn't that bad. Probably hugely depends on the supermarket though. The supermarkets in my area sell extra virgin olive oil that's actually pretty good. The only olive oil better than this was a special small-batch oil I got from a guy in Greece.

    • @calonlan7561
      @calonlan7561 Před 5 měsíci

      @@geneticallymodified7775 meaning you have never had olive oil from the newly pressed batch in Toscana , as in Montalcino for instance..You have so much to learn and so much joy before you, if you get there before the WEF and WHO ruin all our food, as they have been doing for some years now.

    • @user-tt1sj2te9b
      @user-tt1sj2te9b Před 5 měsíci +9

      The trouble is, olive oil is sold all over the world, in every town in every store every day of the year. There just are not that many olive trees anywhere. But people can be so easily fooled.

    • @user-eb8my4vq5s
      @user-eb8my4vq5s Před 4 měsíci

      @@Gilvids No its not. Do you like to smell shit?

  • @ReyOfLight
    @ReyOfLight Před 7 měsíci +155

    I live in Sweden so have a bit less issues with fake food as the EU is very strict with food safety and additives etc. But that said, I'm still buying local whenever possible, like honey for example, I live in a small town and have beekeepers both in the town and in the more rural areas outside the town itself, the bees they keep are buzzing around their nearby areas minding their own business and keeping things polinated while producing really amazing honey and there's a huge difference even between the town bees and the rural bees and even different hives of the rural bees as some of them are in forest environment and some aren't. I personally prefer buying honey from the beekeeper a few streets away from where I live if I find that honey in the grocery store down the street, if I can't find that honey (it's small scale after all so limited amounts available) I buy honey from the rural beekeeper as they have more bees and hence can provide more honey so their honey is almost always available to buy. The reason I prefer the honey from near my home is because the more foresty honey has a much stronger taste (due to what plants the bees have access to) and I feel it can be a bit much in a cup of tea or on a toast, while the in-town honey is more light in flavor as the bees making it are mostly visiting flowerbeds and fruit trees. The more rural honey is really good and I've tasted the different honey types from that beekeeper side by side on farmers market type events here in town. It's truly fascinating how REAL honey varies depending on the surrounding where the bees buzz around, both taste and color of the honey can vary greatly depending on if it's bees focused on forest, farmland or bees visiting people's gardens.

    • @Mondscheinstaub
      @Mondscheinstaub Před 7 měsíci +23

      I‘m German and I’m always thankful for the EU‘s relatively strict rules for food. And the opportunity to import products from the countries of origin without paying unbelievable amounts. I always buy olive oil from a family in Italy and balsamic from another family in Modena. Honey is available from a lot of beekeepers locally here as well, sometimes it‘s just not the season and you have to wait a bit. Which is ok. A lot of Americans don’t even know what the real food is and have never had it in their entire life.

    • @michaeljirava8404
      @michaeljirava8404 Před 7 měsíci +8

      Couldn't agree more! ❤️🇪🇺🇨🇿

    • @BoydofZINJ
      @BoydofZINJ Před 7 měsíci +3

      The real issue is population and television/internet. We all want food and we all see and get recipes and there is no way to get the entire world with the real quality food, especially the rare stuff like parmesean cheese, truffles, olive oils, maple syrup, caviar, etc....

    • @Mondscheinstaub
      @Mondscheinstaub Před 7 měsíci +17

      @@BoydofZINJ I don’t think this is the main issue. We have Parmesan in Europe with the label D.O.P in supermarkets available. Same goes for balsamic, honey etc. It‘s also possible to get these foods in Japan or Korea. The reason why the real foods are not available in the US is pure corporate greed and the relatively low value of food in America‘s mentality.

    • @Imperial_Lizardgirl
      @Imperial_Lizardgirl Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@BoydofZINJ Well ok, maybe they overranked (forgot the right word), but if anyone wants to taste these foods but can't find the real ones cheap, maybe we all should make fakes safe for those people and probably themselves?

  • @michaelbowers3946
    @michaelbowers3946 Před 2 měsíci +2

    My Grandpa(God rest his soul), who is a WW2 veteran, talked a little bit about the Chicory Root coffee they'd drink in Germany during the war. Basically it was ground Chicory with just enough cheap coffee beans for taste. Yes the same Chicory used in some granola bars and nutrition bars to add fiber. I think you can buy Chicory coffee in some stores.

    • @williamruddell6819
      @williamruddell6819 Před měsícem +1

      Hey Michael, occasionally we buy a chicory based coffee In Winn Dixie with a New Orleans type name. Quite flavorful but slightly rougher than more main stream coffee products.

  • @rwolfe180
    @rwolfe180 Před 3 měsíci +1

    insanely useful!!

  • @sheerluckholmes5468
    @sheerluckholmes5468 Před 8 měsíci +217

    It's not just counterfeiters that are a problem with food purity, many so called reputable companies are also guilty of bulking out their products with cheap ingredients but still claiming 100% purity. Coffee and chocolate manufacturers are two that come to mind and there are many more.

    • @robertoperaza2683
      @robertoperaza2683 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Very well said

    • @kateapple1
      @kateapple1 Před 7 měsíci +2

      SPICES! Oh my God it drives me nuts when I turn around a spice container and 97% of it is filler like sawdust!

    • @kateapple1
      @kateapple1 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Also, I’ve heard that there’s legitimately no such thing as avocado oil seeing as how avocado seeds don’t grind down to make oil

    • @robertoperaza2683
      @robertoperaza2683 Před 7 měsíci

      @@kateapple1 I believe that too and if there's any real extraction happening is from the very hard and green fruit which it means is fully loaded with chemicals produced by the plant to protect its baby - the avocado- and repell animals to eat so the benefits to humans sounds to me a hard thing to believe

    • @SaltyMikan
      @SaltyMikan Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@kateapple1 It is a real thing though, avocado oil is extracted from its pulp and not from its seeds (as you said correctly).

  • @akinrujomukemisola
    @akinrujomukemisola Před 7 měsíci +564

    The fact that label itself can be deceiving is mind boggling

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 7 měsíci +1

      Maracuja left the chat.

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 Před 7 měsíci +10

      I noticed last decade labels show no nutrients anymore. Cereal, green beans, nada. Why??

    • @MompreneurDiary
      @MompreneurDiary Před 7 měsíci

      It's not amazing to me because our government banks on our illnesses and REAL FOOD doesn't need a label we just don't like real food

    • @ninelivesstealer
      @ninelivesstealer Před 7 měsíci +7

      Have you ever left your house before???????

    • @lunaqueer
      @lunaqueer Před 7 měsíci

      In the European Union we have laws against that, so with a little knowledge of french history, maybe you could too^^

  • @aerialnight6907
    @aerialnight6907 Před měsícem

    Thank you for the information.

  • @trosebtc2432
    @trosebtc2432 Před měsícem +1

    Great video. Thanks 👊🏼

  • @kollkall00
    @kollkall00 Před 7 měsíci +559

    As an American Professional Chef of 10 years experience I learned a lot from this, I already knew about the fakeness of vanilla and wagyu products, but I had no idea how fake honey and olive oil was, or how to detect fake parmesan from the real thing. Very informative video with verifiable evidence.

    • @dismurrart6648
      @dismurrart6648 Před 7 měsíci +38

      The olive oil con is actually a huge revenue stream for the Italian mafia too. It's genuinely wild

    • @KameraShy
      @KameraShy Před 7 měsíci

      @@dismurrart6648Fake olive oil has been going on for centuries with the Mafia taking the lead. Even I already knew about that. While not technically "fake," the quality of all olive oil is inversely proportional to the amount of shelf space in the grocery stores.

    • @lsanchez1822
      @lsanchez1822 Před 7 měsíci +8

      Doesn't real parmesan also have the Italian seal/stamp on it's packaging?

    • @evonne315
      @evonne315 Před 7 měsíci +8

      The fake oils are kinda disturbing mainly because of how bad food sensitivities can be. My digestion is wrecked I can't do soy, corn, canola oils but olive oil is good except I fear the fakes. Which is why I wont budge on getting the pricy oils from an authentic brand to be sure its real.

    • @evonne315
      @evonne315 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@Sloth-ru5vm Thats disgusting

  • @ozfugs
    @ozfugs Před 7 měsíci +107

    For such a consumer driven society it's remarkable how bad the American consumer protection laws are. You would think the balance of power would be more in the consumers favour. It must be a nightmare trying to buy food there if the labelling is so deceptive.

    • @masond7573
      @masond7573 Před 7 měsíci +11

      It is. Why do you think a significant portion of our country is obese? Actually fresh, organic, and healthy food is expensive for many Americans too.

    • @hansofaxalia
      @hansofaxalia Před 7 měsíci +6

      100 years ago companies could get away with having animal feces in meat products and most bread was mixed with sawdust. Things are aren’t perfect now sure, but for the most part we regulate the market from the worst elements

    • @williammerkel1410
      @williammerkel1410 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@masond7573as a usda employee that works in farm country, "organic" is mostly a marketing ploy, and it is usually terrible for soil erosion because they have to till heavily to keep weeds down.

    • @DBZHGWgamer
      @DBZHGWgamer Před 7 měsíci +5

      The funny thing is, American consumers are more likely to freak out over things that actually don't matter in food than to care about the things that do. For example freaking out over something being "organic" when it has no measurable affect on health or taste, but they still go for the "organic" processed food when they would have been better off going for the normal fresh fruits and veggies.

    • @chrisd7244
      @chrisd7244 Před 7 měsíci

      Those in control of the medical industry is also in control of our food. In the US they want us sick, obese, and diseased so they make money from birth to death.

  • @Grincheypoo
    @Grincheypoo Před měsícem +6

    I live in NC and one year, during the winter, we did taps on our farm, for the maple trees. We saved up gallons upon gallons of sap, then when we went to boil it out, it take hours upon hours to maybe wind up with 2 quarts. Needless to say we sold our tree tap equipment, which wasnt cheap either 😂

    • @maxlown363
      @maxlown363 Před 20 dny

      Im in michigan. We tap 1500 trees every year to make syrup. Its an incredible amount of work even with more efficient equipment. Trying to boil sap in home kitchen pans is rediculously slow. My wife is from the coast of NC. Her parents have a maple tree. Ive wondered for years if it would produce sap.

  • @am_ma
    @am_ma Před 17 dny +1

    That was an informative and a very good documentary.

  • @jordanharpo
    @jordanharpo Před 8 měsíci +42

    i’m scared to watch but ima watch

  • @HaphazardDisastard
    @HaphazardDisastard Před 7 měsíci +150

    I'm perfectly okay with faked foods when it is explicitly shown on the packaging. "Imitation Vanilla" is a popular example. I don't need the more expensive official stuff when my senses are too inferior to detect a difference anyway.

    • @SPQR7117
      @SPQR7117 Před 7 měsíci +13

      Cool- but maybe try consuming things that are less faked, less processed, and slightly more healthy.

    • @chewchewonglass
      @chewchewonglass Před 7 měsíci

      @@SPQR7117 Give me the money to buy that expensive crap your preachy arse is telling people to try. A lot of the fakes are pretty cheap which is part of the allure. People do things on a budget for a reason. I got a cashapp if you're willing, O wise one. LOL

    • @deidradahl2802
      @deidradahl2802 Před 7 měsíci

      But if our foods lack nutritional value, no wonder we might get sick, all empty calories

    • @deidradahl2802
      @deidradahl2802 Před 7 měsíci +7

      ​@@SPQR7117---Spot on, We might get sick if our foods lack Nutrional value

    • @hanjis5894
      @hanjis5894 Před 7 měsíci +35

      @@SPQR7117 I don't really think imitation vanilla is gonna be any more or less healthy than real vanilla extract. u only add a few drops anyways

  • @deeali9757
    @deeali9757 Před měsícem +2

    its crazy how we have to worry about these things

  • @tarstarkusz
    @tarstarkusz Před 28 dny +1

    You absolutely can legislate this problem away. Every increase in sentencing laws raises the cost of these counterfeit products. RISK is taken into consideration, it is priced in. The higher the risk, the higher the price. Once the counterfeit stuff is double the price of the real stuff, the counterfeit product is completely uncompetative with the real stuff.

  • @CappellaKeys
    @CappellaKeys Před 4 měsíci +196

    The problem isn’t not wanting to buy the fake stuff, it’s not getting paid enough to afford the real stuff

    • @pp3k3jamail
      @pp3k3jamail Před měsícem +19

      Exactly like these people in the video can afford the real stuff but a mother and a father with three kids or single parents etc struggling to make ends meet is not going break their paycheck on a real bottle of olive oil or real honey or high quality real syrup.
      I've been eating Mrs Butterworth or Log cabin or even the generic syrup from supermarket ever since I've been alive and that's fine with me.

    • @user-mf4jg7cb4b
      @user-mf4jg7cb4b Před měsícem

      And they are not getting paid enough to make the real stuff. They want to get wealthy by producing fake stuff. They can't buy yachts and send children to Harvard by making honest products. So, if you want the real thing is up to you to step your game up, spend countless currency on a higher education. Get a higher paying job so that every producer can live lavishly.

    • @sergiomercado4859
      @sergiomercado4859 Před měsícem +23

      Youre just missing the point of the video. The point isnt that there shouldn’t be cheap alternatives it’s that they shouldn’t try to trick people through labels. Some of these fakes werent even cheaper 💀

    • @badcaseofstripes
      @badcaseofstripes Před měsícem

      @@sergiomercado4859 I mean one of the main conclusions of the video is saying to just buy more expensive products because they're more likely to be real; the example of some fakes being expensive is a non issue because it's not even close to the majority of fake products at all. That sounds pretty backwards when pay hasn't increased at all in recent decades while prices keep skyrocketing... The point of what individual consumers can do is still exactly the same, poor people will continue to buy cheaper things because it's all they can afford, whether it's fake or not. Richer people will buy up, fake or not. No individual person can do anything about phony labels and false advertising, that's up to legislation. Nobody said anything about cheap alternatives not existing anymore, it's that there would be no need for them to exist if your average person got paid a livable wage. I'd wager that most people aren't technically being deceived at all, they know exactly what they are buying is fake crap but it's literally all they can afford. Nobody goes buying cheap top-ramen thinking it's giving them an authentic ramen experience.

    • @iyoe
      @iyoe Před měsícem +3

      ​@sergiomercado4859 I'd say finding it is the issue, though thats my experience

  • @thatonebraziliancity822
    @thatonebraziliancity822 Před 4 měsíci +307

    As someone who's from quebec (where most maple syrup is made), its actually harder to find fake maple syrup. I'm very happy for having lived here because I have indulged in the flavourful joy of it since childhood, so I love sharing it with family and friends that come from the US when they haven't had the real stuff before, seeing their faces light up makes me happy. It's damn delicious.

    • @Ninjanimegamer
      @Ninjanimegamer Před 4 měsíci +9

      Same here, but I'm from New England of the USA. We too make real maple syrup and it's not hard to find and not that expensive.

    • @ruthannweist3885
      @ruthannweist3885 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Came here to say this. I'm from Maine, and there are more options for real maple syrup in the grocery than fake syrup.

    • @Julia-nl3gq
      @Julia-nl3gq Před 3 měsíci +7

      I'm from Saskatchewan, and while I don't think it's hard to find fake syrup here in the grocery stores, I didn't have any until I was like forty (well, unless I had it as a kid, and just can't rember), and, blech, is it ever gross. It doesn't taste right at all.
      I don't know, maybe real syrup is more common here in SK than in places like the US, even though it's not like SK is some big maple-syrup-making province.

    • @oj1914
      @oj1914 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Yup agree. I went to Quebec the first time in 2016 and had maple syrup there and was like “oh wow, that’s different”… I even came back with a can of it haha

    • @paxrail
      @paxrail Před 3 měsíci +1

      Artificially flavoured corn syrup. Delish.

  • @user-ms2kp4yp5e
    @user-ms2kp4yp5e Před 2 měsíci +1

    I am from Brazil and live in a “coffee town”. I don’t work with it, but I know a lot about it (everyone here knows one or two things about coffee).
    My piece of advice is: buy the whole bean and ground it at home. You still don’t know if you are buying great coffee or normal coffee, but it’s 100% coffee.

  • @EmpoweredYou98
    @EmpoweredYou98 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks for the insight

  • @bruceli9094
    @bruceli9094 Před 7 měsíci +17

    5 things killing us
    1) Seed oils ("vegetable" oil)
    2) Sugar
    3) Artificial ingredients
    4) Chemicals in food
    5) Chemicals in water

    • @saffran8625
      @saffran8625 Před 7 měsíci

      Do you know H2O is a chemical?

    • @johannesbastiaan
      @johannesbastiaan Před 7 měsíci

      I hoped that they would also mention that the seed oils in fake olive oil has a detrimental impact on your health.

    • @lhaviland8602
      @lhaviland8602 Před 7 měsíci

      Water is a chemical dumbass.

    • @shirleypatten6212
      @shirleypatten6212 Před 7 měsíci +1

      We need to read food packaging for "contains bioengineered ingredients." Basically, GMOs.

  • @VaD3773
    @VaD3773 Před měsícem

    This popping up after i just got back from Canada literally 2 days ago is weird but perfect at the same time.

  • @timothysiler5722
    @timothysiler5722 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Does anyone else feel like they have been cheated?

  • @DeanBobolini
    @DeanBobolini Před 4 měsíci +148

    I will say on the coffee end of things, I used to work for Starbucks at one of the plants in the U.S. the main warehouse could fit (3) 747 airplanes inside. The whole place was insanely clean and organized. Coffee beans were separated by country of origin upon arrival and constantly tested for contaminations. There is a library of every run of coffee product produced up to the last 3 years. Constant checks for product defects. The facility could even recycle its own air and filter it for up to something like 6 hours. It was one of the cleanest and most professional places I ever worked.

    • @phillipsugwas
      @phillipsugwas Před 4 měsíci

      The Germans, I understand ,put a tax on any processed coffee imported into Germany. By processed, I mean, for example, roasted beans. So just imagine the impact - discouraging beneficiation in poor growing countries.

    • @DeanBobolini
      @DeanBobolini Před 4 měsíci +10

      @@phillipsugwas I’m not entirely sure of every aspect of these coffee plantations, I know the beans are bagged after being sun dried (I don’t know if this is considered processed or not) but I am certain the dried beans are not roasted beans when leaving their country of origin. The process is more involved than many realize. Almost immediately after being roasted the beans need to go into an airtight sealed bag with a plastic valve for relief gases to escape (coffee beans actually release gasses for a short time after roasting) but if you let oxygen get back into the bag the beans will oxidize and go stale fairly quickly. All the machines involved are very expensive and maintenance intensive.
      Roasters, bag constructor, bagging machine, packaging machine, conveyer belts, ect. So usually coffee beans are roasted when they arrive at whatever region that has this equipment. (Last time I checked) There are 5 plants in the U.S. I think 3 dotted around Europe, and 1 in china. From there it’s distributed to consumers. So realistically Germany isn’t hurting the poorer countries by imposing the import tax, but a wealthier nation that already paid the plantation owners. (Not saying the workers at these plantations are paid very well because they probably are not. Although in the case of Starbucks they do try to work with plantation owners to pay their workers higher wages. In the end the plantation owners still don’t pay that well cause the owners tend to pocket a decent amount of the cash Starbucks gives them… not to mention Starbucks itself makes huge profit off the raw beans they receive. The economics are complicated but the field workers are the ones that are really screwed in the end… Starbucks itself though pays its workers amazing wages with plenty of benefits.

    • @Kat-n-Ollie
      @Kat-n-Ollie Před měsícem +4

      Not any more. Starbucks is the worst for moldy beans.

    • @TheEsjie
      @TheEsjie Před měsícem +2

      Why do they produce the worst tasting coffee & most off putting blends if they’re so ahead?

    • @maggiegoossens1894
      @maggiegoossens1894 Před měsícem +3

      could all very well be but I still refuse to pay their insane prices for a cup of coffee.

  • @Justthecrust
    @Justthecrust Před 7 měsíci +485

    Honestly, I don't think the caviar scam is that bad. As said, Sturgeons are endangered, most are on the brink of extinction, I think switching to the fish eggs from another more common fish is a great solution. As long as the customer isn't physically harmed and aware of what they are buying, I see no problem.

    • @cris-1001
      @cris-1001 Před 7 měsíci +39

      Legit Chinese guy talkin there

    • @evonne315
      @evonne315 Před 7 měsíci +120

      Im shocked thier allowed to harvest from an animal in danger.

    • @deaansugee
      @deaansugee Před 7 měsíci +82

      Are you all daft or did you spaz out in parts of the video? The problem is not and never has been people selling fish eggs of a different species, it's selling fish eggs of a different species and labeling it as caviar - when caviar comes exclusively from sturgeons. What you think of harvesting caviar from sturgeons is irrelevant here, the point is selling one thing while labeling it as another to leech off the market value of that something.

    • @tezla6332
      @tezla6332 Před 7 měsíci +34

      @@evonne315I think most of it is farmed anyway, but yeah there's a reason they're endangered and it's because they're taking millions of eggs and chowing down that could have made thousands more breeding sturgeon, it's pretty fucked

    • @Stormiwulf59
      @Stormiwulf59 Před 7 měsíci +2

      conservation is key

  • @nicolethompson8613
    @nicolethompson8613 Před 2 měsíci +1

    My family tapped the trees and boiled sap just a couple of weeks ago or so, the final tally from the first haul (we will do it again with the next thaw) was 13.8 gallons of what we call liquid gold - not for the cost (we don't sell it, we keep it and use it or gift it), but because it is so perfectly delicious and straight from my late Grandpa's woods in Northern Michigan. Everyone has fun at the maple sugar shack, and the fresh stuff is delicious on waffles with ice cream!

  • @neiloconnor9349
    @neiloconnor9349 Před 2 měsíci

    Splendid, Thanks!

  • @PortalFPV
    @PortalFPV Před 6 měsíci +20

    Remember....FDA Approved means diddly squat. A company does it's own testing on it's own product and then submits their findings to the FDA for approval. The FDA doesn't have time to double check every single product out there (like we think they are supposed to do) and so it gets "approved" without a single thought or secondary testing, just as long as everything
    looks" ok and they filed all the appropriate paperwork.
    Good luck out there, because the ones you thought were protecting you......don't

    • @roxcyn
      @roxcyn Před 5 měsíci +3

      Yes, they only test when people report to them. It’s important that we do that. Also, 40 to 80% of over the counter drugs and prescription drugs are made with products from or made in China and India. Look at the contaminated eye drops recently and many other examples. 😞

  • @lotsoflemonisback
    @lotsoflemonisback Před 8 měsíci +67

    Regarding olive oil, the EU regulation for when an oil is considered “extra virgin” is its acidity level. Greek oils are less acidic than Italian and Spanish oils in general. Most producers will mix oils from various producers in order to obtain the highest allowed acidity level for the oil to still be considered “extra virgin”. A farmer told me this and I’ve found that Greek-produced extra virgin olive oils are much more likely to be of higher quality (grassy, fruity, greener) than the blended Italian and Spanish varieties

    • @renatopinto3186
      @renatopinto3186 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Why are Greek oils less acidic in general? Has it something to do with the soil they're grown in? Because not only Spain and Italy blend in different producers' oils into one single shelf-brand. That's how the olive oil industry tends to operate also in Greece, Turkey, Portugal, etc.

    • @lotsoflemonisback
      @lotsoflemonisback Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@renatopinto3186 Simply relaying the words of the (british-greek) farmer I spoke to, so I wouldn't know if it's a truth cut in marble. I'm sure Greece also has its fair share of industrial producers, but it's my impression that there are way more local and non-industrial producers, particularly in rural areas, with the pressing being done at local community mills. On the other hand non-blended oils from Spain and Italy seems more likely to be sold with 'single estate' labels, thus pushing the product and the price into the specialty/luxury market. I guess it also speaks to the way the food industry is much more protected and capitalised in Italy and Spain as compared to Greece ...

    • @regulus6936
      @regulus6936 Před 7 měsíci +3

      If extra virgin olive oil is characterised by that level of acidity, it probably means that it can reach it by using just olives, without the need of blending it. Of course the British-Greek farmer will tell you that his oil is better...

    • @renatopinto3186
      @renatopinto3186 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@lotsoflemonisback thank you for the reply. From what I know acidity can be influenced by a number of things, including ripeness and damage to olives' skin (weather, basically). Which makes me wonder if Greek producers have some special way of organizing their plantations or subsequent processing. It's also a bit unclear to me if an extra virgin is synonymous with less processing. If so, it would make sense, as you suggest, for more archaic methods to yield oils which retain better properties. Tho, from personal experience, here in Portugal, greener and fruitier home-made oils tend to be more acidic (edit: sour, actually) than the distilled golden premiums at the supermarket.

  • @shiaa9980
    @shiaa9980 Před měsícem

    Beautiful narration

  • @Viral_Picks_Store
    @Viral_Picks_Store Před 3 dny +2

    Food fraud is a sneaky and widespread issue that affects both consumers and legitimate producers. While some deceptive practices may skirt legal boundaries, others, like food fraud, are outright illegal and pose serious risks. It's astonishing to think that what we assume to be premium ingredients could be cheap substitutes, harming both the integrity of the food industry and the health of consumers.
    The scale of this problem is staggering, with the global food fraud industry estimated at a whopping $40 billion. Not only does it undermine the hard work of honest producers, but it also fuels criminal activities and jeopardizes consumer trust.
    However, shedding light on these deceitful practices is crucial. By understanding how food deception operates and learning to identify genuine products, we can empower ourselves to make informed choices and support ethical producers.

  • @LexusLFA554
    @LexusLFA554 Před 7 měsíci +6

    Sometimes I wish videos like these would actually change the way we think about buying products, but for most authentic stuff we simply can't afford it. That is exactly where the fakes strike.

  • @OsamaBinKevo
    @OsamaBinKevo Před 8 měsíci +35

    Never been more glad that my father-in-law keeps bees.

  • @erikthechosenone
    @erikthechosenone Před měsícem +1

    I’m glad that they finally made a video like this. But I’m sure there’s other videos too. But one of my main concerns is high fructose corn syrup. And I like to see videos like this where they explain what’s real and what’s fake and what is an hour foods and how they are sneaky and they try to put things on the label as long as it’s there. But they do it in a very discreet way.

  • @willd.4808
    @willd.4808 Před měsícem +2

    Even if you don't care about the quality of your food, it's also important to note that companies that charge more, have more opportunities to pay their farmers and other employees a good wage. Higher quality goods more easily translate into a more ethical business model.

  • @RedheadedMusic
    @RedheadedMusic Před 7 měsíci +6

    We have a small Olive farm in Northern California and produce our own EVOO… Our biggest expense is the “Hand Harvesting”, no machines to shake the trees because the machine would cost as much as our whole property cost and we only have 85 trees on our property. Depending on the year, we produce as much as 10 to 14 gallons of oil a year, so far… Most of Our trees are now about 10 yrs old and they are predominately Arbequina Olives, which are Spanish Olives that are grown for their oil. By the time we pay for harvesting, milling and then bottle it plus label, a 17 oz bottle will cost me, to produce at least $10.00 just to break even. So when big huge farms, who own the mills and use equipment to harvest trees. It is much cheaper for a large company in Europe to produce EVOO than a small family owned farm in Nor Cal to make any money. But it is a true labor of Love and the end product is off the charts incredible and so very healthy for you. We also note on the label when our fruit is harvested/milled (same day) and then when we bottle, which can sometimes be months after the milling because we Do Not filter our oil, it naturally filters via gravity. We do often bottle a few gallons after the milling and it’s called “Olio Nuovo”- New Oil which has a shorter life because it has not been filtered. The flavor is much more stronger and full of a brighter flavor. It’s amazing. So buy from small family owned farms and stay healthier!

  • @cynot71
    @cynot71 Před 8 měsíci +233

    This "fake" problem isn't going away any time soon. As long as stores keep selling these products, people will keep buying them.

    • @NohabloEng
      @NohabloEng Před 8 měsíci +9

      Because people always want to save money, but jeopardise their health with doing so..

    • @nicojar
      @nicojar Před 8 měsíci +13

      You're definitely confusing the cause and the consequence, here. As long as people will keep buying them, other people will still produce them and stores will still sell them. That's how it works.
      You have a power: stop consuming bad products. Your vote, your control, is where you put your money. You're the final consumer, you're the one responsible for this - not corporations. Corporations give you whatever you'll buy as long as you keep on buying it. Perhaps not you personally, but "you", the consumer, people like you.
      And me, to an extent (for wasabi for sure, as there is very little choice, but not for the other products), but I live in EU, and EU strongly regulates this kind of things, we generally have better food products than in US and anything that's produced in Europe is controlled and protected, recipes included. So, for now (emphasis on that "for now"), we're eating alright and our salaries correspond to the produce we can buy and want to buy. I'm French, if I want truffles, I ask my family, or I go to the farm. We get very decent parmiggiano straight from Italy, we get regional olive oil produced in Provence, we get real vanilla cultivated in Madagascar and Reunion Island, you can't sell fake maple syrup and call it maple syrup, that'd be straight up illegal...
      So I guess your other power is demanding regulations to your government.
      But get the causal link right: the consumer buys the bad thing, so the corporations produce the bad thing. Stop consuming it, and evil corp will quit making it. ;)

    • @dejavu2752
      @dejavu2752 Před 8 měsíci +24

      The majority of people on the planet cannot afford to eat premium ingredients, and will likely never have the opportunity to try the premium to know what they taste like.
      As long as there is demand for the taste (especially from people who are either looking to cut costs or don't particularly care if their ingredient is premium for a certain recipe), imitation products at a fraction of the price of a real thing will always exist.

    • @tedspens
      @tedspens Před 8 měsíci +2

      And as long as people keep buying it, they'll keep selling it. True, the "fake foods" problem isn't going away anytime soon, but we have the choice of seeking out the real foods, if we can afford them. Personally, I want and am willing to pay for the real stuff.

    • @juiccybaze
      @juiccybaze Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@nicojar prevention better than cure, you don't expect people or humans to be smarter if without proper way of bringing them up or education... there will always be fools and victims falling for bad and evil stuffs... it's evident in this world, no matter where on earth at all, and human nature is indeed like everything else, always a way around it

  • @alexanderdantonio8999
    @alexanderdantonio8999 Před 16 dny

    Truly eye opening and mind blowing.
    Based on this vid... ive had real maple syrup, honey and olive oil. As for coffee, with the amount ive drank, im sure some of it was real. Parm...not my fav cheese so meh.
    This is an amazing video. Brilliant.

  • @songerph
    @songerph Před 8 měsíci +56

    How criminals get away with selling fakes --> government allow them!

    • @JasmonTP
      @JasmonTP Před 7 měsíci +4

      It's all about the money.

    • @billytringuyen1
      @billytringuyen1 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ya, paid the government not to inspect their business

    • @gohardorgohome6693
      @gohardorgohome6693 Před 7 měsíci

      this is legitimately what one of the January 6 people said

  • @radicalfishstickstm8563
    @radicalfishstickstm8563 Před 7 měsíci +14

    Something being fake isn’t that big of an issue if the consumer doesn’t care. Imitation vanilla works just fine for most culinary uses and wasabi being mostly horseradish is a commonly known fact. Tell a Japanese person that their wasabi is fake and they’ll just shrug. The producers care because products being real is a major selling point. The rich will buy anything if it’s rare enough. The real concern for the average consumer should be food safety, and at this point it’s not really the additives they should be worried about. Most additives that will outright kill you are outlawed, what’s more dangerous is all the salt, sugar and fat in food nowadays. Vanillin won’t kill you but eat enough sugar and you will die. There’s also other additives that’ll kill you slowly or rarely that the FDA approves but the common stuff is more dangerous with how prevalent they are.

    • @Astroqualia
      @Astroqualia Před 7 měsíci

      Dangerous additives not being regulated is a major concern for fake foods, and most non-pure food, usually. Even fungicides in fish and herbicides on plants, with antibiotics affecting our hormone production in beef and chicken should be on a top priority list to watch out for. Wonder where the uptick in cancer comes from, bell curve lining up precisely with how commercial markets for food developed and increased in demand, among other things.
      There isn't a magical cancer fairy that sprinkles you with cancer dust while you sleep, randomly; it comes [at least mostly] from a genetic disposition affected by things we put into our bodies, that affect how our bodies cellular functions like repair work. That's what cancer is at its core - abnormal cell growth. What ruins the ability for cells in the body to properly function? Obviously is either chemicals we are exposed to, or things we put in our bodies. Hell, even chemicals usually get put in our bodies to cause cancer, like someone working or living at/near a chemical plant, a commonly reported finding.

    • @joz534
      @joz534 Před 7 měsíci

      This really feels like advertisment for overpirced stuff.

    • @radicalfishstickstm8563
      @radicalfishstickstm8563 Před 7 měsíci

      @@joz534 What am I selling exactly? I start off by saying that you can buy fake vanilla and wasabi instead of the more expensive real stuff. I also say the people selling you food only care about their stuff being real because they can sell it for more to anyone who can afford caring. And if it’s that you think I’m saying fake food being sold for the same price as real food is a good thing, no I obviously don’t. I have common sense. I’m only selling ideas and you’re not forced to buy them.

  • @WindFireAllThatKindOfThing
    @WindFireAllThatKindOfThing Před 17 hodinami +1

    This channel: Shows me a rich, tailored suit Italian gent talking about the purity of Italian parm
    Also this channel: WON'T YOU PLEASE THINK ABOUT THE POOR PARM FARMER

  • @C0yf1sh
    @C0yf1sh Před měsícem +1

    Bro its so easy to make honey now with those flowhive things, idk why people aren’t just doing that because you would also be saving the honey bees.

  • @kokofitfaded
    @kokofitfaded Před 5 měsíci +36

    This is just shameful. Disgusting what greed has done to us. How far we’ve come just to lose everything…

  • @lb8384
    @lb8384 Před 7 měsíci +66

    Everyone should've known at least about vanilla, truffles and parmesan. Especially when in America, where the majority uses those fake vanilla extracts instead of real vanilla.

    • @tbrowniscool
      @tbrowniscool Před 7 měsíci

      American's have access to the worst food in the world. 💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲

    • @JP-uk9uc
      @JP-uk9uc Před 7 měsíci

      I wish, unfortunately these thieves that produce this garbage will put authentic right on the face of it just to sell more of this and knock off crap to you

    • @mieblock4856
      @mieblock4856 Před 7 měsíci

      If anyone should've known about any of these its that ain't jamaima shit ain't real maple syrup.
      Fake vanilla would be easy to slip past most people Id say, since the difference seems subtle

  • @romanaa7070
    @romanaa7070 Před měsícem +1

    I thought everyone already knew this. Maybe its just because im obsessive about reading labels/packaging before buying. Ever since I learned about monsanto/GMOs and "big food" almost 20 years ago I question everything.

  • @yourgooglemeister6745
    @yourgooglemeister6745 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I seriously doubt Walmart shoppers care about their parmesan not being real

  • @always_b_natural703
    @always_b_natural703 Před 7 měsíci +67

    When we lived in the country, my parents processed their own honey. After moving, they sourced honey from local producers. If you want real, you often have to make your own, or have reliable suppliers.

    • @emilia6014
      @emilia6014 Před 7 měsíci +3

      100% agree. We always get honey from a local beekeeper. We know the stuff he sells is legit and we never looked back to grocery store honey.

    • @TRAMP-oline
      @TRAMP-oline Před 7 měsíci

      Not even remotely true.

  • @tintin7500
    @tintin7500 Před 7 měsíci +9

    Love this! You guys have summarised some of your content and got it narrated. I know for sure that I have already watched all of these but when I watched this, I feel like it's new content. Love the commentary from experts as well!! Keep up the good work!!!

  • @Gabriel_OGDC
    @Gabriel_OGDC Před 2 měsíci +1

    I love that honey woman... just the fact that at the end she said to not waste the fake honey, but instead use it as a hair/skincare thing...

  • @user-nm9ht5ez6l
    @user-nm9ht5ez6l Před měsícem +1

    Well Done!!!

  • @copper0
    @copper0 Před 8 měsíci +29

    My favorite parts of this whole video: every time the narrator bounces back to the United States "except in the US where the FDA allows wood chips in the food supply", "except in the US where the FDA allows cellulose in the food supply", "except in the US where the FDA allows this slew of chemicals in the food supply", "except in the US where the FDA allows petroleum byproducts in the food supply". And then the American's all wonder why non-americans don't have as many issues with their heath, weight, life expectancy as they do.

    • @katelynjimenez16
      @katelynjimenez16 Před 8 měsíci +6

      I’m not going to say you’re wrong but the main reason for that is a vicious cycle of people who literally cannot afford better quality food, live in food deserts, so they simply have to buy what’s available to them or else they don’t eat. It sucks, honestly

    • @kazual9206
      @kazual9206 Před 7 měsíci

      @@katelynjimenez16 No, even it poor "3rd world" countries people don't do that. The US citizen are lied to and there is no consumer lobby to protect them from fraudulent practice unlike many other countries.
      It's time the american wake and stop letting these companies poison them just so they make more profits.

    • @Astroqualia
      @Astroqualia Před 7 měsíci

      That's not actually entirely true anymore, OP. Europe is quickly catching up, as different substitutes are used that cause these problems in america increasingly.

    • @ernestogastelum9123
      @ernestogastelum9123 Před 7 měsíci +1

      the health issues come from people not controlling themselves and eating a lot of fast food

  • @isigo483
    @isigo483 Před 8 měsíci +137

    In the honey business, sugar water is fed to bee's to increase the honey production. The honey produced this way has a pretty bland flavour and is very watery, but since its dirt cheap to produce it's usually mixed into normal honey to increase volume of production. There is a high chance that most people that haven't bought honey straight from a producer have never tasted real honey in their lives

    • @jamesspalten5977
      @jamesspalten5977 Před 8 měsíci +4

      BS. You can't feed enough sugar water to bees during honey making season. It is added after the honey is extracted.

    • @lars2894
      @lars2894 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Yes, there are 5 tiers of honey
      (1) >50% corn / rice syrup + cheap (2) honey + artificial flavoring
      (2) Honey from bees fed fructose / sucralose syrup
      (3) Blends of refined honey from multiple farms with various flower sources
      (4) Refined single flower source honey (eg. Japanese Acacia)
      (5) Unfiltered and unrefined raw honey
      90% of honey in grocery stores are (1) or (2). In rare occasion stores carry (3) on the very top-shelf. (4) is what you find in specialty / artisan shops and (5) you can get from a local honeybee farmer.

    • @boxicool
      @boxicool Před 8 měsíci +9

      I never buy honey in shops. Only from beekeepers. And now i have my own bees :)

    • @_armoredglasscannon2520
      @_armoredglasscannon2520 Před 7 měsíci

      Oh my god no way. Thanks for informing us about this.

    • @Bootstataboots
      @Bootstataboots Před 7 měsíci +1

      Such a ridiculous process. Why can't they just grow a variety of flowers near those bees to just make normal honey??

  • @pmontour
    @pmontour Před 3 měsíci +1

    Starbucks genuinely has 100% high quality beans. Maybe what you got to drink at the shop that day isn’t great, but their bagged whole bean is top quality and authentic with well paid pickers.

  • @Aqnde
    @Aqnde Před 3 měsíci +1

    We can all do without high-end products, but faking honey is something unforgivable.