CATrends: What the Fudge?
Lawsuits allege brownie brands and others lack the essential dairy ingredients to call their products fudge.
A popular summertime treat is the subject of a current trend in class-action litigation.
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UPDATE 10/29/21: Dozens of class-action lawsuits have been filed since 2019 alleging that foods and beverages are falsely marketed as vanilla. More than 100 lawsuits were filed by the same attorney. This attorney has also sued companies for allegedly falsely marketing products as containing fudge and misrepresenting that products contain the fruit advertised on the label. Our original article follows.
Face it, on a hot summer day, there’s only one flavor of ice cream that will suffice: vanilla.
But how several ice cream brands achieve that distinctive vanilla taste — and whether that precludes them from marketing their products as “vanilla ice cream” — is the subject of a current trend in class-action litigation.
“For a product labeled as vanilla ice cream, the sole flavor must be vanilla extract or flavor,” which indicates it comes from the vanilla bean, states a class-action lawsuit against Dove, one of four brands accused of misleading consumers on how it gets its vanilla ice cream to taste so vanilla-y.
Instead of exclusively using real vanilla from the vanilla bean, Dove and the others (Friendly’s, Edy’s and Breyers) use ingredients designed to mimic the flavor of real vanilla, which show up on the ingredients list as “natural flavor,” the lawsuits claim.
“In reality, the natural flavor which simulates and reinforces and extends vanilla here likely is a form of wood pulp or coal tar derivative,” the suit against Breyers alleges. In other words, not real vanilla.
The lawsuits also contend that the brands add food coloring to give the ice cream a yellow hue to make it look creamier.
TINA.org reached out to the brands for comment. Out of the four, only Dove responded, saying it “cannot comment on pending litigation.”
Find more of our coverage on ice cream here.
Lawsuits allege brownie brands and others lack the essential dairy ingredients to call their products fudge.
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