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Southern Living on MSNWho Else Remembers The Grandma Candy That 'Tastes As Bad As The Name Sounds'?Horehound candies aren’t quite like the brightly colored, cavity-inducing sweets that you loved to grab from grandma’s stash.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a new blue color additive derived from the fruit of the gardenia, a flowering evergreen, for use in a variety of drinks and candies.
Knowing past Wordle answers can help with today's game. Here's the full list so far.
Cherry Humps -- at one time the 16th best selling candy bar in the U.S. -- made only in Winona until 1986. (Contributed photo by the Winona County Historical Society) ...
The White House asked companies to remove Red No. 3, an artificial color in candy and cereal, sooner than the 2027 deadline ...
The FDA just approved a new natural color additive for use in food, named gardenia (genipin) blue. This color is derived from the flowering evergreen plants, gardenias, and marks the fourth natural ...
The FDA approved gardenia blue, or genipin, as another step in the Make America Healthy Again initiative headed Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
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