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General Mills says it will drop artificial colours, flavours from cereals

General Mills on Monday, June 22, 2015 said it is dropping artificial colours and flavours from its cereals, the latest company to respond to a growing desire for food made with ingredients people see as natural.
General Mills on Monday, June 22, 2015 said it is dropping artificial colours and flavours from its cereals, the latest company to respond to a growing desire for food made with ingredients people see as natural. AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File

General Mills is dropping artificial colours and flavours from its cereals, the latest company to respond to a growing desire for food made with ingredients people see as natural.

The company said Monday that Trix and Reese’s Puffs will be among the first cereals to undergo the changes. As a result, the reformulated Trix cereal later this year will be made with four colours instead of six, said Kate Gallager, cereal developer for General Mills.

READ MORE: Artificial ingredients: Americans demanded change and got it, Canadians not so much

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While the company was able to come up with alternatives for red, orange, yellow and purple Trix pieces, Gallager said it was too difficult to find natural alternatives for blue and green that achieved the right taste and colour.

“We haven’t been able to get that same vibrant colour,” she said.

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The Minneapolis company says cereals like Lucky Charms that have marshmallows may take longer to reformulate. It says 90 per cent of its cereals will have no artificial ingredients by the end of 2016.

READ MORE: Taco Bell, Pizza Hut join growing list of companies nixing ‘artificial ingredients’

A range of food companies including Subway, Pizza Hut, Panera, Hershey and Nestle have said in recent months that they’re removing artificial ingredients from some or all products. Companies say the changes are a response to a demand for food made with ingredients people can recognize.

General Mills, which also makes Cheerios and Cinnamon Toast Crunch, says more than 60 per cent of its cereals are already made without artificial colours and flavours.

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