December 23, 2023 -The US has multiple versions without artificial colors. Just because it exists in the US doesn’t mean anyone has to buy it. Jfc.
... In the USA, the Aldi version of fruit loops has natural food coloring too. October 16, 2024 -In Canada, Froot Loops are colored withconcentrated carrot juice, watermelon juice and blueberry juice.
But in the U.S., the cereal still contains artificial colors and BHT, a chemical preservative. August 8, 2025 -Froot Loops north of the border are dyed withjuice concentrated from naturally occurring watermelon, blueberry, the tropical huito fruit, and from one vegetable — carrot, the ingredients' list says. October 18, 2024 -Earlier this week, protesters gathered outside the Michigan headquarters of WK Kellogg Co.
to demand that the company remove artificial food dyes from its Froot Loops, Apple Jacks, and other breakfast cereals. Kellogg had pledged back in 2015 to remove artificial dyes from its foods by 2018. But that hasn’t happened, despite the company making changes to its formulas in other countries—coloring Froot Loops in Canada with concentrated carrot juice, watermelon juice, and blueberry juice, for example—where artificial colors are more tightly regulated.
April 25, 2025 -6. In a box sold in Canada, the colored rings obtain paler shades from the juices of blueberries, watermelon and huito, an Amazonian fruit. And not a single one is blue.
The manufacturer in both countries, WK Kellogg, formerly known as the Kellogg Company, can clearly make Froot Loops without synthetic dyes. The question is: Will it and other big food ... May 24, 2024 -Froot Loops will keep their artificially brightened colors.
Some Pop-Tarts will lose them. Welcome to the ongoing experiment that is the American breakfast. The two companies formed after Kellogg Co.
split last year are now facing new regulations on the use of artificial food dyes, leaving them to chart their own courses in a controversial area for highly processed foods, especially those designed for kids November 13, 2024 -Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has thoughts about the food dyes used in Canada’s Froot Loops vs.
the American version of the cereal. September 30, 2024 -"These dyes are often found in many foods marketed to kids, such as candy, breakfast cereals, baked goods, ice cream and sports drinks, Gianfranco Cesareo, a law fellow specializing in food safety at the Environmental Working Group, tells Yahoo Life. However, they can also be present in less obvious products, like canned fruit and pickles. Now, the 109-year-old food company is the latest to make the change.
Competitor General Mills had also made a similar announcement about a month ago. Thankfully, this isn’t a major change for Kellogg. About 75 percent of its cereals in North America are made without artificial colors and more than half of are made without artificial flavors.
Those who enjoy the sugary saturated colors of fruit loops, however, will be sorely disappointed. April 26, 2022 -And, did you adjust the color balance throughout the images, or where does the bottom gradient come from? ... Huh… just read on the box that their colour comes from fruit and vegetable juice rather than food colouring.
... Like I have real maple syrup money. That stuff is saved for breakfast, sausages, mashed sweet patato, and ice cream, thank you very much.
... Look, I am not buying a box of froot loops because I am concerned about health.