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For years, rumors have circulated about gummi candies using car wax as an ingredient, a claim that appears most often in listicles about strange ingredients in foodstuffs, but also as a shocking reason you shouldn't eat such candies published on health sites that also carry endless articles about toxins. But what's the truth? The short answer is yes, Haribo's popular fruit-flavored Gummi Bears brand candies are finished with carnauba wax, as plainly stated on the Haribo web site: The primary ingredients in Gummi Bears are sugar, glucose syrup, starch, flavoring, food coloring, citric acid, and gelatin. In the Haribo candies, carnauba wax — produced from leaves of Brazilian trees that secrete carnauba wax to protect them from the hot sun — finishes off the product with a shiny glaze for aesthetic purposes. Well, just how much wax is in that Gummi Bear, anyway? In the United States, food product labels must list all ingredients in decreasing order by weight. In other words, the most plentiful ingredient (by weight) is listed first, and the least plentiful ingredient is last. Looking at a label of Haribo Gummy Bear ingredients, we see that carnauba wax is listed last, even after artificial colors such as Yellow #5, Red #40, and Blue #1: In an article discussing the ingredients of gummi candies in general (not specifically the Haribo Gold Bear brand), carnauba wax is mentioned as a 2% polishing agent. That is, the carnauba wax that is applied to the outside of the gummi candies consists of only 2% carnauba wax along with other ingredients (e.g., water, mineral oils, vegetable oils). No articles we could find provide an exact amount of carnauba wax used an ingredient in gummies and other candies, but its volume in a given candy appears to be fairly minor. On Drugs.com, carnauba wax is described as a safe, non-toxic, and inert ingredient. The melting point of carnauba wax is 180 degrees Fahrenheit, which means it doesn’t melt in the human body and passes, unabsorbed, through our intestinal systems. In contrast, car waxes typically contain approximately 30% carnauba wax (and presumably taste quite a bit different). Readers may also be interested in knowing that carnauba wax not only appears in jelly beans, Gob Stoppers, Skittles, Dubble Bubble gumballs, and a variety of other candies with hard shiny exteriors, but it is also used as a coating on medications to make them easier to swallow.
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