What are some food products that have gelatian?!
Answers: i need examples beside jello bc i am scared i have been eating some!!!! help
Gelatin, can be included as a trace product in some, products but may be mentioned. some include jello, starbursts, skittles, gummy bears, pretty much most gummy candy. But you can always find out about great gelatin free. Some yogurts, and frozen deserts may contain gelatin including ice cream- Yuck, but your in luck yogurt usually contains "kosher gelatin", in which most are vegetarian-friendly you can always call the company to check.
candies:
Airheads taffy
Blow Pops
Brach's Cinnamon Hard Candy
Charms lollipops
Chick-o-Sticks
Cry Babies
Dem Bones
Dots
Dum Dums
Fireballs
Goldenberg's Peanut Chews
Hot Tamales
Hubba Bubba Bubblegum
Jolly Ranchers (lollipops and hard candy)
Jujubees
Jujyfruits
Laffy Taffy
Lemonheads
Mambas
Mary Janes (regular and peanut butter kisses)
Mike and Ike
Now and Later
Pez
Ring pop lollipops
Smarties (U.S. version only)
Sour Patch Kids
Super Bubble
Swedish Fish
Sweet Tarts
Tropical Source mini chocolate bags
Twizzlers
Zotz
hopes this help just always look out for those tricky ingredients here you go:
Gelatin—Rhymes with "skeleton." Coincidence? I think not. Gelatin is a protein made by boiling cows' and pigs' skin, tendons, ligaments, and bones. Jell-O? Hell, no!
Lard—Lard is such a gross word, it almost makes you wonder why they just don't call it what it is: "Fat from hog abdomens."
Pepsin—If the thought of eating lard turns your stomach, stay away from pepsin, a clotting agent from pigs' stomachs, used in some cheeses and vitamins.
Rennet—Certain words just make you cringe, like coagulate, congeal, clot—which is what rennet, an enzyme taken from baby calves' stomachs, is used for in cheese production.
Stearic Acid—It may sound less gross than "lard," but stearic acid, which often rears its ugly head in chocolate and vitamins, comes from a fatty substance taken from slaughtered pigs' stomachs—or from cows, sheep, or dogs and cats euthanized in animal shelters. Still want to chew on that piece of Fido?
Cetyl Palmitate—Check your head if you're using margarine that contains cetyl palmitate, the fancy term for the waxy oil derived from sperm whales' heads or from dolphins. "I can't believe it's not ... oh, wait. It is? Whale head wax?"
Urea—Urea comes from piss and other "bodily fluids." It's used to "brown" baked goods, like pretzels. Um, yeah. And the oven is for ...?
You should always be sure to check the labels, but these foods tend to contain gelatin.
Marshmallows, yogurt, frosted cereals, gelatin-containing desserts, molded salads..
marshmallows and some yogurts.
Marshmallows
gummy bears