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Heather Callaghan
Activist Post
For at least one week, the World Wide Web has been in an uproar about Walmart’s Great Value ice cream sandwiches that won’t melt after 12 hours in 80-degree heat. The issue was raised in this WPCO report when a Cincinnati mother, Christie Watson, saw that her child’s ice cream sandwich simply wouldn’t melt.
Some consumers are freaking out, while others are trying to quell the “alarmism.” Is there a cause to be worried about this everlasting gobstopping creation?
And, are people focusing on the wrong argument?
In the original story’s experiment, Haagen Dazs melted quickly (it only has 5 ingredients), followed by Klondike sandwiches at a much slower rate – but it still melted. News anchor John Maltese believes that Walmart brand is safe according the FDA and repeatedly tells viewers not to waste their money on premium brands.
Now, here’s what’s in Great Value vanilla ice cream sandwiches. All bolding below is mine.
Ice Cream (Milk, Cream, Buttermilk, Sugar, Whey, Corn Syrup, Contains 1% Or Less of Mono-And Diglycerides, Vanilla Extract, Guar Gum, Calcium Sulfate, Carob Bean Gum, Cellulose Gum, Carrageenan, Artificial Flavor, Annatto For Color), Wafers (Wheat Flour, Sugar, Soybean Oil, Palm Oil, Cocoa, Dextrose, Caramel Color, Corn Syrup, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Corn Flour, Food Starch-Modified, Salt Soy Lecithin, Baking Soda, Artificial Flavor).
Walmart had this response:
Ice cream melts based on the ingredients including cream. Ice cream with more cream (sic) will generally melt at a slower rate, which is the case with our Great Value ice cream sandwiches….[emphasis mine]
Well, not exactly… higher fat content will melt faster. Higher water content like in non-fat items will melt slower. (Post-Gazette) But I digress… I need to emphasize this – we’re not wondering about slower rates, but no melting rate.
The following bulleted websites offer explanations about Walmart’s ice cream and why we people should relax and move on – nothing to see here. They basically say the same things about fat content, stabilizers, gums, emulsifiers, corn syrups and thickeners. A lot of articles on the subject reference the Post-Gazette article even though it goes counter to Walmart’s claims and never talks about ice cream that forgets to eventually melt.
These compounds [versus regular ice cream] are the main cause of an ice cream sandwich’s startling stability.
[...]
It’s more solid and less melty, so it won’t fall apart in your hand when you bite it. These properties are thanks to the viscosity added by guar gum and calcium sulfate.
Guar gum is a polysaccharide (a molecule made of multiple sugars) extracted from the guar bean. It’s a plain white powder that is obtained by milling the matured beans. If “natural” food is a concern for you, guar gum is about as natural as it gets. It acts as an emulsifier, which means it thickens in water and stabilizes thawing…
Calcium sulfate is useful for trapping moisture, making it a perfect partner for guar gum. The combination of these two materials thickens the ice cream and holds it together, even as the “ice” part melts. The addition of cellulose gum (another polysaccharide) enhances this effect, but it’s mostly guar gum and calcium sulfate doing the heavy lifting.
Ice cream made for convenience includes a lot of chemistry - still nothing about inability to completely melt. All those additives amount to something that doesn’t resemble actual ice cream.
The arguments about food ingredients side step the point that this particular brand will not melt in extreme heat. Yes, we know about the chemistry that helps it to keep its shape. We know about slower melting rates. But no one has truly explained why the ice cream won’t eventually melt. The “ice” part never melted.
Also, it’s not true that ice cream sandwiches don’t melt. They do, even with similar thickeners, emulsifiers, stabilizers and fillers.
Look at Klondike’s ingredients – their’s melted slower, but eventually did melt – similar ingredients:
Light ice cream: nonfat milk, sugar, corn syrup, milkfat, whey, maltodextrin*, propylene glycol monoesters, cellulose gel, mono and diglycerides, cellulose gum, locust bean gum, guar gum, polysorbate 80, carrageenan, natural and artificial flavor, caramel color, annatto (for color), vitamin A palmitate. Wafer: bleached wheat flour, sugar, palm oil, caramel color, dextrose, high fructose corn syrup, modified corn starch, baking soda, salt, cocoa, soy lecithin. *Not in regular ice cream.
Are there other unlisted ingredients that Walmart’s brand is not disclosing? Thanks to this federal regulation – CFR Title 21, Sec. 101.100 – we don’t know. It exempts a lot food labeling requirements, falling back on “industry standard.”
WPCO‘s John “Don’t Waste Your Money” Maltese adds:
Bottom line: The ingredients list may be long, but the government says those ice cream sandwiches are okay to feed to the kids.
As always, don’t waste your money.
Oh… Well, when you put it that way… That’s not a reason for ice cream to never melt. Maybe the question should be – do you really want to eat any of the listed ingredients? Bottom line: why waste your money on that.
Heather Callaghan is a natural health blogger and food freedom activist. You can see her work at NaturalBlaze.com and ActivistPost.com. Like at Facebook.
Recent posts by Heather Callaghan:
People that expose this crap are national heroes. They just may be be saving lives.