According to the Natural
News Forensic Food Lab, Wheaties breakfast cereal, manufactured by
General Mills, has been found to contain so many microscopic fragments of metal
that individual flakes can be lifted and carried using common magnets. Photos
of the microscopy investigation are posted now at Labs.NaturalNews.com.
The metal bits are added to
Wheaties cereal to enhance the nutritional profile and claim a higher iron
content on the label, but lab director and food scientist Mike Adams is
skeptical of the formulation. "Adding shards of metal to a cereal is not
nutritionally equivalent to nutritive minerals formed during the growth of
grain-producing plants," he explains. "Bioavailability is vastly
different."
Adams believes that adding metal
fragments to a cereal mix in an effort to claim a higher nutritional content on
the box is "inherently deceptive" and points out that the
manufacturer, General Mills, has also sold other deceptively labeled cereals
such as "TOTAL Blueberry Pomegranate," which contains neither
blueberries nor pomegranates.
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Coconut oil is very different
from most other cooking oils and contains a unique composition of fatty acids.
The fatty acids are about 90% saturated. This makes coconut oil highly
resistant to oxidation at high heats. For this reason, it is the perfect oil
for high-heat cooking methods like frying.
Additionally, coconut oil
consists almost entirely of medium-chain triglycerides.
These fatty acids go straight
from the digestive tract to the liver, where they are likely to be turned into
ketone bodies and provide a quick source of energy. Epileptic patients on
ketogenic diets often use these fats to induce ketosis while allowing for a
little bit of carbs in the diet.
To see some fascinating and
interesting clips regarding the truths discovered by the Natural News
Forensic Food Lab and more, one can easily log onto:
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