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How bugs and beet juice could play roles in the race to replace artificial dyes in food

ST. LOUIS (AP) 鈥 As pressure grows to get artificial colors out of the U.S. food supply, the shift may well start at Abby Tampow鈥檚 laboratory desk.

4 min read
How bugs and beet juice could play roles in the race to replace artificial dyes in food

Jobe Washington, right, and Dwight Brown use a large sifter to mix a shade of yellow coloring at Sensient Technologies Corp., a color additive manufacturing company, in St. Louis, on Wednesday, April 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)


ST. LOUIS (AP) 鈥 As pressure grows to get artificial colors out of the U.S. food supply, the shift may well start at Abby Tampow鈥檚 laboratory desk.

On an April afternoon, the scientist hovered over tiny dishes of red dye, each a slightly different ruby hue. Her task? To match the synthetic shade used for years in a commercial bottled raspberry vinaigrette 鈥 but by using only natural ingredients.

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