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Thursday, October 6, 2022

The Strange Ingredient Used To Make Jelly Beans Shiny - Tasting Table

According to Culinary Lore, shellac is also called confectioner's glaze (this is what it's typically listed as in the ingredients list), pure food glaze, or natural glaze, and it's what is responsible for giving a lot of our everyday food products their shiny outer shell. The odd thing about shellac is its origin: Shellac is a resinous substance that is secreted by an insect called the lac bug, per Mental Floss. Female laccifer lacca produce and secrete shellac from the trees of their native habitats of Southeast Asia and Central America, where it is harvested and processed into the glaze jelly beans end up covered in.   

Unless you're vegan and are striving to avoid all animal products, though this might sound weird, it's not really that big of a deal. Of course, shellac is not harmful to consume, but the use of animal byproducts is also not all that uncommon. Things like beeswax and honey are also insect byproducts that people don't bat an eye at. Shellac is everywhere, so the next time you're taking your chances on a dubiously colored jelly bean, take a second to thank the bugs that make it possible. 

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The Strange Ingredient Used To Make Jelly Beans Shiny - Tasting Table
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