CANDIES COLORING
HOW THEY GIVE THE COLOR TO THE M&M'S CANDIES?
COLORED CANDIES
We eat LOTS of candies. Most of them are unhealthy because of the coloring. Let's take a look at it. 6 The single-colored batches are combined into the mixtures of red, yellow, blue, green, brown, and orange. They are then transported to the machine that stamps the "m" on the shells. A special conveyor belt carries the pieces to this machine. Each piece rests in its own indentation. The piece runs under rubber etch rollers that gently touch each candy to print the "m." This machine is specially designed to imprint the "m" without cracking the thin candy shell. The process used is similar to the off-set printing process. Approximately 2.6 million M&Ms' are transported to the etching machine per hour. One hundred million individual M&Ms® can be manufactured per day.
LOOK AT THOSE COLORS!
Can you imagine how much food coloring they used?
EXAMPLES.
Here, you can see some examples of the candies.
M&M CANDIES!
They look like a rainbow! Aren't they great?
Watch how Mars makes M&M's
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