Food Facts

Recent Content

How November and December Are the Most Dangerous Months

How November and December Are the Most Dangerous Months

Holiday decorating sends over 15,000 people to the ER annually, and spoiled Christmas leftovers cause 400,000+ illnesses.

Read more
The Paranoid History Behind Clinking Glasses During Toasts

The Paranoid History Behind Clinking Glasses During Toasts

Clinking glasses before drinking started as a medieval poison detection method. Now it's mandatory etiquette that nobody questions.

Read more
Why We Eat Ham for Christmas Dinner

Why We Eat Ham for Christmas Dinner

Christmas ham started as a pagan winter solstice sacrifice that Christians tried to ban but couldn't.

Read more
Why We Threaten Bad Kids with Coal for Christmas

Why We Threaten Bad Kids with Coal for Christmas

The threat of coal in your stocking started as Italian families giving actual heating fuel as gifts. Somehow it morphed into the ultimate Christmas punishment.

Read more
Why Do Department Store Santas Exist?

Why Do Department Store Santas Exist?

One department store's 1890 marketing stunt created the tradition of sitting on Santa's lap. Now it's a billion-dollar industry that defines Christmas.

Read more
See All Content
logo
  • Sports

  • History

  • Language

  • Food

  • Tech

  • Animals

  • Sports

  • History

  • Language

  • Food

  • Tech

  • Animals

  • ​
    ​

The Hidden Bug Ingredient in Your Red Food

The Hidden Bug Ingredient in Your Red Food

That vibrant red color in your strawberry yogurt, fruit punch, and even some lipsticks comes from an unexpected source that would make most people squirm.

Carmine, one of the most common red food colorings, is made by crushing thousands of tiny female cochineal insects that spend their lives munching on prickly pear cacti in South and Central America.

It takes approximately 70,000 of these bugs to produce just one pound of carmine dye. The insects are harvested, dried, and then ground into a fine powder that creates that perfect crimson shade manufacturers love.

The process itself is surprisingly ancient. Indigenous peoples in Mexico and Peru have been using cochineal insects to create red dye for over 500 years, long before synthetic food coloring existed. Spanish conquistadors discovered this incredible natural pigment and carmine became so valuable it was worth more than gold by weight during the colonial period.

You'll find this insect-based ingredient hiding in plain sight on labels under names like "carmine," "cochineal extract," "crimson lake," or "natural red 4." Major food companies use it because it's considered "natural" and creates more vibrant, stable colors than synthetic alternatives.

Starbucks famously used carmine in their strawberry Frappuccinos until customer backlash forced them to switch to a tomato-based alternative. But countless other products still contain it: red velvet cupcakes, fruit snacks, some varieties of Skittles, Dannon strawberry yogurt, and even some organic products marketed as "all-natural."

The cosmetics industry relies heavily on carmine too. Your red lipstick, blush, and even some shampoos likely contain ground-up insects. The beauty industry particularly loves carmine because it doesn't fade or change color when exposed to light or heat like many synthetic alternatives do.

The FDA requires carmine to be listed on ingredient labels, but most consumers have no idea what it actually means. Vegetarians, vegans, and people with shellfish allergies (who can also react to cochineal) often consume this insect product without realizing it.

The harvesting process is incredibly labor-intensive. Workers must hand-pick the insects from cacti using brushes, then carefully dry them in the sun before grinding them into powder. A single cactus plant might host thousands of cochineal insects, but each bug is smaller than a peppercorn.

The irony is that this bug-based dye is often more expensive than synthetic red coloring, but companies use it specifically because they can market products as containing "natural ingredients" while customers remain blissfully unaware they're eating insects with their breakfast.

Related Content

Terms and ConditionsDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationPrivacy PolicyPrivacy NoticeAccessibility NoticeUnsubscribe
Copyright © 2025 Fun Fact Feed