

Hi everyone,
I’m from Spain and currently living in Latvia for 3–4 months. I’m health-conscious and always read ingredient lists before buying products.
Today, I checked a product labeled “Honey Flavour”, but the ingredients did not mention honey or any honey flavouring. I also cross-checked 2–3 different websites, and none listed honey or honey flavouring.
My questions:
Is this a common practice in Latvia?
Does “honey flavour” usually mean artificial flavoring even if not listed?
Or am I misunderstanding something?
Thanks in advance for your clarification 🙂
https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1rgyzgx
Posted by NoImpression8722

9 Comments
If you are health conscious maybe chips aren’t the way to begin with. You can always contact the manufacturer with your question.
Honey flavor usually means no real honey same with other flavors. And the other spices imitate honey taste. Some might advertise as “with honey” then it must contain some % of honey, but usually it’s very little
Going “does this mean artificial flavouring” when “natural flavouring” is literally on the ingredient list is a choice.
Tomato chips only had beetroot listed and no tomato
garšvielu maisījums (cukurs, dekstroze, garšas pastiprinātājs (mononātrija glutamāts)
dabīgs aromatizētājs
What I want to know is where they put the barbecues inside it
You can’t really do much with honey for chips flavor i suppose, so to mimick “honey” flavor, they are using combinations of spices and NATURAL flavors (that could be some sort of, for example, crystalized honey in small amounts) that are all listed there.
So, no, common practice in Latvia (as in EU in general) is to list all the ingredients correctly, even if they manage to make said flavor with various different ingredients.
“Honey barbeque” might just sound better than ‘Murica inspire sugary slop, which it is. marketing babey. Not like there’s any meat drippings either
Chips, not the best product to seek the highest industry standards as to natural ingredients. (there are better chips, if you seek as natural as possible, though these do taste really really good. I prefer the Dill or the wasabi variety.)
But to ask, based on this isolated case, if this the industry norm here? I feel your judgement may be clouded. Speaking simply, I think you’re seeking evil, not explanations.