Pointless food labels.

They don’t need one. There’s a fruitloophole in the regulations.

I believe butter-flavored Crisco shortening packages bear the information “Not a spread for bread”. :smiley:

VCNJ~

Sez who?

Or the cartons of milk sold with the warning that they may contain milk in the UK :dubious:

My favorite is a product called “Nut Butter”, which as one would expect, “contains nuts.”

Not a food item, but one of my favorites is the new Ambien sleep aid drug. One of the side effects in the commercial is “may cause drowsiness”…um…ya think?

I’m fond of kosher carrots and kosher spring water, myself. Preferably as an accompaniment to a sandwich of trans-fat-free peanut butter on whole-wheat bread (caution: contains wheat).

I actually asked one of the pharmacists that I work with about that kind of thing, and she said something along the lines that if a doctor prescribes something typically used as a sleep aid for an off-label purpose, they need to have the drowsiness side-effect known.

From the manual for my Motorola cell phone:

Don’t try to dry your phone in a microwave oven.
Does that mean I should try to dry it in the regular oven?
Don’t expose your phone to dust, dirt, sand, food, or other inappropriate materials.
Innapropriate for its age, like gangsta rap or bondage porn?
Don’t drop your phone.
Damn, I never get to do anything fun.

The instructions and warning on Carmex always make me giggle:

So, I guess bad things happen if you apply it sparingly?

Yep, they don’t sell as much Carmex.

Don’t say nothin’ about throwing.

In the UK, at least, if it has a picture of fruit on the label, or just says “Fruit product” (e.g. “Strawberry yogurt”) then it has to contain fruit by law. If it doesn’t then it can’t have a picture of fruit, and must say “Fruit flavour” instead.

seen on a package of peanuts whilst in the air between indianapolis and las vegas. swear to god i’m not making this up:

  • peanuts-

instructions:
open bag.
eat.
now, why didn’t i think of that??? :smack:

So, my doctor has me taking aspirin to avoid long-term heart problems. It would, therefore, be reasonable for the aspirin bottle to have a warning lable saying “Warning: This product may cause your headache to go away.”

:dubious:

I think they list negative tings, as for asprin “may cause gastric bleeding”. :slight_smile:

:o Someone gave me a homemade tamale once and really built up how great it was going to be. I’d never had them and I prepared it as instructed. Of course I was faced with the cornhusk which I couldn’t imagine I was supposed to eat, but the only thing inside it was mush and that didn’t seem like a real food item either. Was there supposed to be breadlike anything in there? I ended up tossing it all.

They were experimenting on someone handy. Like I do when I make my wasabi-mint ice cream. :smiley:

:cool:
Locatelli brand Romano cheese comes with a label that says “Naturally low in CARBOHIDRATES!” (Yes, they spell it that way.) So is that cheap Romano next to it full of sugar, or full of starch?

Since there is so such think as a carbohidrate, I suppose it is indeed rather low in them.

[loudspeaker]Paging Gaudere, paging Gaudere, your pronouncements needed in the dairy products aisle![loudspeaker]