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Milma

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Kerala Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (KCMMF) popularly known by its trade name Milma, is one of the most profitable cooperatives in Kerala. Check nutritional stats of Milma products on OpenFoodFacts The state-run cooperative society, based in Thiruvananthapuram, was founded in 1980. KCMMF is a Federation of three Regional Milk Unions:  Ernakulam Regional Co-operative Milk Producers’ Union (ERCMPU) Trivandrum Regional Co-operative Milk Producers’ Union (TRCMPU) Malabar Regional Co-operative Milk Producers’ Union (MRCMPU) In 2025, Milma shared 92.5 percent of its profits with farmers.

Know Your Hunger Hormones

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Insulin, ghrelin, and leptin are three key hormones that orchestrate appetite, energy balance, glucose metabolism, and body weight regulation. Hunger Hormones Explained Ghrelin – Rises when your stomach is empty and screams “eat now!” Protein-rich meals and chewy, high-volume foods suppress it best. Sugary drinks and ultra-processed snacks barely touch it. Leptin – Made by your fat cells to signal “you have enough energy stored.” High levels should kill appetite, but in many overweight people, the brain stops listening (leptin resistance). Better food quality and gradual fat loss help restore sensitivity. Insulin – Spikes after eating carbs and tells your body to store energy while turning off hunger. Refined sugars cause big spikes; protein + fiber + fats produce a more moderate, sustained release. "Calories in, calories out" is oversimplified—food quality and matrix profoundly influence how the body "reads" a meal. High-protein foods, slow-digesting fibers (like o...

How Food Companies Engineer Addiction

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Drawing from books like Salt, Sugar, Fat , Hooked , and Ultra-Processed People , the YouTube video Big Food Companies Are Using Indians As Lab Rats argues that India is not just a market, but a lab—1.4 billion test subjects under weak regulations . It shows how brands create a “health halo” by slapping words like protein, fiber, multigrain, natural, and organic on their packaging. It highlights how a "healthy" snack brand riding on the health appeal of Ragi sells chips with the same calories as a pack of Lay's, yet charges two and a half times the price. nutritional info is listed per 30g instead of 100. Companies are required to be honest with us when it comes to their claims. But there is nothing stopping them from manipulating our lack of awareness and attention to detail against us. Fighting back starts with a skill that's becoming increasingly important: knowing how to read a label.

Comparing Packaged Coconut Water Brands in India: 100% vs Reconstituted

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Coconut water is one of the most popular natural hydration drinks today. With so many brands available on supermarket shelves and online platforms, it becomes important to understand what you are actually buying. Packaged coconut water generally comes in two categories based on the label declaration – those that mention 100% Coconut Water and those that are reconstituted from coconut water concentrate . Image: OpenFoodFacts Below is a comparison of popular packaged coconut water brands available in India, grouped by their label claim (data from OpenFoodFacts.org & Amazon.in). 100% Coconut Water Brands (as declared on label) Brand Name Ingredients Pluckk 100% Natural Tender Coconut Water with Real Malai Chunks Tender Coconut Water (99.30%), Coconut chunks(0.70%) Pluckk Natural Tender Coconut Water Tender Coconut Water (100%) Mojoco Coconut Water Tender coconut water Yu 100% Coconut Water Coconut Water Raw Pressery Coconut Water Coconut Water (100%), Biopreserva...

The Taxonomy of Taste: How International Systems Regulate Ingredient Names

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Many countries maintain official "Ingredient Dictionaries" or "Common Name Lists" to ensure that when a manufacturer says "Sugar" or "Milk," it means the same thing on every label. While National Nutrition Databases (like the USDA's FoodData Central) focus on what’s inside the food (vitamins/minerals), Regulatory Identity Lists (often part of a country's food law) define what the ingredient must be called. Here are the most prominent official systems used to make ingredient identity clear: 1. Canada: The "Common Names" List Canada is perhaps the most explicit. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) maintains a document called " Common Names for Ingredients and Components ." It acts as a mandatory "thesaurus" for food labels. The Goal: To prevent vague or deceptive labeling. Example: If a manufacturer uses a mix of butter, cream, and skim milk, they are legally allowed (and sometimes required) to group the...