90% is the worst. Dark chocolate has double heavy metal than milk chocolate. //@Anonymous: In this deal, Lindt 90% was not tested, any data on it?
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By anonymous on 04/25/2024, 09:43 PM EDT
A little lead never hurt anyone. And what's wrong with cadmium? I have creme eggs from the cadmium bunny every easter. In for a pack of 90% dark.
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By anonymous on 04/25/2024, 01:39 PM EDT
In this deal, Lindt 90% was not tested, any data on it?
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By anonymous on 04/25/2024, 01:31 PM EDT
The FDA is right there, in the pocket of the corporate lobbyists. //@anonymous: If true, where is FDA? //@anonymous: Thanks for pointing this out. Google search leads to the following article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/09/well/eat/dark-chocolate-metal-lead.html //@Anonymous: study found that dark chocolate had, on average, 7.6 micrograms of cadmium and 0.8 micrograms of lead per one-ounce serving, and some products had three or four times as much. Lindt is one of this.
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By anonymous on 04/25/2024, 08:06 AM EDT
According to a December 2022 report by Consumer Reports, certain dark chocolate bars, including the Lindt products named in the lawsuit, have high enough levels of lead and cadmium that eating just an ounce a day would put an adult at a consumption level that public health authorities would deem “harmful.”
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By anonymous on 04/24/2024, 10:17 PM EDT
If true, where is FDA? //@anonymous: Thanks for pointing this out. Google search leads to the following article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/09/well/eat/dark-chocolate-metal-lead.html //@Anonymous: study found that dark chocolate had, on average, 7.6 micrograms of cadmium and 0.8 micrograms of lead per one-ounce serving, and some products had three or four times as much. Lindt is one of this.
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By anonymous on 04/24/2024, 09:50 PM EDT
Thanks for pointing this out. Google search leads to the following article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/09/well/eat/dark-chocolate-metal-lead.html //@Anonymous: study found that dark chocolate had, on average, 7.6 micrograms of cadmium and 0.8 micrograms of lead per one-ounce serving, and some products had three or four times as much. Lindt is one of this.
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By anonymous on 04/24/2024, 09:31 PM EDT
study found that dark chocolate had, on average, 7.6 micrograms of cadmium and 0.8 micrograms of lead per one-ounce serving, and some products had three or four times as much. Lindt is one of this.
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