Pepsi has a new challenge: Keeping products like Gatorade and Cheetos vivid and colorful without the artificial dyes that U.S. consumers are increasingly rejecting
Thanks. I think, though, that the “organic spice powder” is probably changed for the organic version, to include things that act as natural colors.
So, it looks like (regular) Doritos uses Yellow 5, an artificial color. I don’t see any breakdown for Doritos, but for another food that was replacing Yellow 5:
https://www.kroger.com/p/doritos-simply-organic-spicy-white-cheddar-tortilla-chips/0002840074477
About the same. The non-spicy ones look more like plain tortilla chips. On these ones, the spice powder is colorful enough without added dye.
Thanks. I think, though, that the “organic spice powder” is probably changed for the organic version, to include things that act as natural colors.
So, it looks like (regular) Doritos uses Yellow 5, an artificial color. I don’t see any breakdown for Doritos, but for another food that was replacing Yellow 5:
https://www.foodprocessing.com/product-development/color/article/55264494/here-are-replacements-for-banned-color-additives
So my guess is that turmeric probably would qualify as “organic spices”, and you’d use it to color things.