Food Unwrapped S01E07 HDTV XviD AFGseeders: 2
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Food Unwrapped S01E07 HDTV XviD AFG (Size: 201.39 MB)
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XxXx BIG A LITTLE A xXxX
Presents Food.Unwrapped.S01E07.HDTV.XviD-AFG Food Unwrapped explores how our food is really made and the industry secrets behind our favourite produce. Reporters Matt Tebbutt, James Watt, Martin Dickie and Kate Quilton travel the globe to discover just how the food we love is mass produced. The series contacts supermarkets and producers with simple questions about the food we buy: What's the wax on my lemons?; What are the bacteria in my Probiotics?; What is formed ham? If they can't explain it, the gang of hungry detectives stop at nothing to find out, travelling to the food producers who supply the supermarkets to investigate, from Liverpool to Swaziland, and Thailand to Spain. Taking the cameras behind the doors of factories worldwide, the inquisitive food lovers meet food technicians, scientists, factory owners, growers and producers in order to reveal weird and wonderful facts we never knew about our food. S01E07 of 8 Original Air-Date: Monday 29 October 2012 Kate travels from Essex to Holland to try and find out how sandwich manufacturers stop our packet tomato sarnies from going soggy. And the team investigate how strawberry flavoured foods really get their strawberry flavour. Kate starts at one of the UKs most innovative sandwich factories, which supplies shops, hospitals, the House of Commons and even Buckingham Palace, who surely wouldnt stand for soggy sandwiches. The sandwiches are cut by a sonic laser to ensure the perfect slice, with clever spreading of margarine and layering of ingredients to stop moisture leakage. But the real revelation is that they use a tomato that has been specially bred to stop soggy sandwiches. The Intense Tomato, launched in 2007, is very firm, with few seeds, and makes hardly any juice when squeezed, but is incredibly tasty and a deep red colour. In Holland, Kate discovers that this hybrid tomato took 10 years to develop, using the latest cross-pollination and plant DNA technology. Strawberry is one of the most popular flavours in yoghurts, sweets, drinks and cakes. Matt and food scientist Rachel Edwards Stuart try to make strawberry yoghurt with the average amount of strawberries in supermarkets' own brands - 10% - but can't produce any flavour. Martin Dickie visits the huge Nestle factory that makes Fruit Pastilles to ask how they get the strawberry pastilles so strawberry-ish and discovers that a six-times-concentrated strawberry flavour and strawberry oils are the key. And they both contain some strawberries, which means the factory can put a picture of a strawberry on the packet. Post Information Posted by..........: XxXx BIG A LITTLE A xXxX Date of post.......: 03.11.2012 Related Torrents
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