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  1. Join Date
    May 2005
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    6,090
    #1
    Was it last year or something that a Philippine gov't agency banned White Rabbit because it was tested to be containing a hazardous chemical or mineral something? Our country got a lot of flak from the arrogant owner of White Rabbit and even from the Chinese gov't (who incidentally retaliated with something I forgot...). The owner of White Rabbit even provided a photo of him eating his toxic ware! Good for him! Let's see him to do that again. :D

    Popular Chinese candy linked to tainted milk
    By TINI TRAN, Associated Press Writer
    Sept. 27, 2008 2 hours, 49 minutes ago

    BEIJING - They were Premier Zhou Enlai's favorite late-night snack. He loved White Rabbit candy so much he gave a bag to President Nixon during his historic visit to China. But the iconic brand, beloved by generations of Chinese, took a hit after it was linked to the tainted milk scandal.
    The Shanghai-based maker of the candy said Friday it had halted production because of suspected melamine contamination. The chewy vanilla-flavored White Rabbit sweets have already been pulled from shelves around Asia and in Britain.

    The Guan Sheng Yuan Co. was still waiting for test results on samples of its exported products, but all sales have been stopped as a precaution, said Ge Junjie, a vice president of Bright Foods (Group) Co. Ltd., which owns the Shanghai maker.

    "It's a tragedy for the Chinese food industry and a big lesson for us as it ruined the time-honored brand," Ge was quoted as saying by the Shanghai Daily.

    The popular sweets are sold in more than 50 countries throughout Asia and the world, including most of the Chinatowns in the United States. Overseas sales have reached $160 million over the past five years.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommended Friday that consumers not eat White Rabbit candy and that retailers remove it from sale. The agency also recommended avoiding Mr. Brown instant coffee and milk tea products being recalled by Taiwan's Car Food Industrial Co. Ltd., though it said it was not aware of any illnesses in the United States linked to either the candy or the coffee and tea products.

    Tests in Singapore and New Zealand this week found White Rabbit sweets were tainted with melamine, the industrial chemical that has already been found in milk and other dairy products in China. Used in making plastic and fertilizer, it has been blamed for causing kidney problems in infants and young children, sickening some 54,000 and killing four babies. About 13,000 remain hospitalized.

    The widening scandal has dealt a huge blow to China's leading candy maker, which has been producing the hugely popular sweets for about a half-century.

    "White Rabbit is a famous brand, with huge brand assets. It's almost an icon and carries lots of memories. Imagine if the same thing happened to Coca-Cola," said Kara Chan, a professor in the communication studies department at Hong Kong Baptist University who studies branding.

    White Rabbit was first produced in 1959, "in celebration of the 10th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China," according to the company Web site.

    Its historic pedigree got an even bigger boost in 1972 when the Chinese premier gave the candy, along with two pandas, as a state gift for the visiting President Nixon as a sign of friendship.

    Virtually all Chinese have fond memories of the sticky, taffy-like confection wrapped in edible rice paper. With its distinctive red, white, and blue packaging and wide-eyed namesake, White Rabbit candies are ubiquitous, routinely offered up in homes throughout China.

    "When we were in school, all my classmates liked White Rabbit," said Su Yan, a 19-year-old sales clerk. "Girls would ask their boyfriends to buy it for them and the candy would be served on occasions like holiday receptions, a graduation party and wedding ceremonies."

    Retailer Carrefour and supermarket chain Jingkelong in Beijing said their stores have pulled the candy off their shelves, but other grocers, including one in the popular Silk Market, still stocked it on Friday.

    Tea stall owner Yuan Yaqi, a self-described White Rabbit fan, had a 5-pound bag open beside her as she waited for customers Friday.

    "I loved White Rabbit when I was a child, because I liked milk products," she said. "I remember at every Spring Festival, my parents prepared a big dish mixed with melon seeds, peanuts and candies to be served to visiting friends. I often picked out the White Rabbits and hid them somewhere for myself."

    Yuan said she had not heard about the melamine contamination ban, but said: "If White Rabbit was gone forever, I would feel very sad."

    It's not the first time White Rabbit has faced allegations of contamination. Last year, it was at the heart of another controversy, with the Philippines government claiming the candy contained formaldehyde and demanding a recall. The company blamed counterfeit candy for the problem.

    Concern about White Rabbit candy has spread as far away as South America, where health authorities in Suriname ordered stores to stop selling it as a precautionary measure. The candy is widely available in Suriname, where people of Chinese heritage make up roughly 8 percent of the population.

    In Peru, White Rabbit candy was among five milk-based Chinese products banned for import or sale by the health ministry. Mexican health official ordered stores removes the candies as well as Mr. Brown instant coffee, and announced the country was banning imports of those products.
    Source

  2. Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    39,174
    #2

    It was their milk industry's fault. Others have to suffer because of this.....

    6808:frenchyf1:

  3. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    15,528
    #3
    sarap pa naman kainin nung plastic neto.
    if i remember, white rabbit white also got involved with the formalin scare years back.

  4. Join Date
    Oct 2002
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    29,354
    #4
    Any of you remember Storck menthol candy? ... I think it was the lead contamination in the plastic wrapper during that time.

  5. Join Date
    Sep 2003
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    21,384
    #5
    Halls na lang.......

  6. Join Date
    Oct 2002
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    21,433
    #6
    Quote Originally Posted by number001
    The owner of White Rabbit even provided a photo of him eating his toxic ware! Good for him! Let's see him to do that again.
    Hindi naman kasalanan ng White Rabbit yan. Kasalanan ng supplier nila ng milk.

  7. Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    3,722
    #7
    Eto yun di ba?



    buti nalang di ako mahilig dyan.

    About the Storck Candy scare. Yeah, some traces of a harmful chemical were found in the old 'twist wrapper' plastic that they used to use. The chemical daw was needed to make the wrapper a bit brittle so that it would stay twisted during packing.

    The new ones are now in what they call a 'pillow wrap' like the ones used by Maxx, Halls and the like.



    Notice the New Improved! label

    .
    Last edited by Memphis Raines; October 1st, 2008 at 11:20 PM.

  8. Join Date
    Sep 2005
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    3,829
    #8
    Kasalan ng gatas yan.

  9. Join Date
    May 2005
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    6,090
    #9
    Mars (maker of M&M's, Snickers, etc....) , Cadbury, etc....are all scrambling to assure the public of the safety of their products. At the same time, they are also voluntarily taking out tainted products off the shelves. These companies take responsiblity for their products whether or not they were indirectly at fault. Whether or not these companies do these bec. they are compelled by law or regulations is another thing.

    In this case, it may be the milk's supplier's fault but White Rabbit failed to do any diligent quality assessment on the ingredients that they were going to use on their product, which is for assumed to be safe for human consumption.

    This is just an analogy. There is a famous saying "Ignorance of the law does not excuse anyone." or something to that effect. They may not know that the milk being used are tainted but White Rabbit has the responsibility to check the veracity of their supplies from time to time. This applies to all companies [with products affected by tainted milk], whether the use of tainted and substandard quality of milk or other ingredients were used out of negligience, complacency or deliberately (to cut cost).

  10. Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Posts
    4,631
    #10
    Nung buhay pa yung lola ko, napakahilig niya sa White Rabbit. Never slept at night without eating one. Napa-isip tuloy ako if she was already ingesting melamine as well, and if that had contributed to her passing.

  11. Join Date
    Sep 2005
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    3,829
    #11
    Ano ba ikinamatay ng lola mo bogeyman?

  12. Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    6,090
    #12
    more...

    Candy with chemical in Chinese milk found in Conn.
    By LARRY SMITH
    Wed Oct 1, 6:49 PM ET

    HARTFORD, Conn. - An industrial chemical blamed for sickening thousands of infants in China was found in candy in four Connecticut stores this week, a state official said Wednesday.

    Days after contaminated White Rabbit Creamy Candy was found in California, Connecticut Consumer Protection Commissioner Jerry Farrell Jr. said tests found melamine in bags of the candy sold at two New Haven stores, a West Hartford market and an East Haven store.

    "We're concerned, obviously, there may have been bags sold of these before we got to them," Farrell said.

    Anyone who has the candy should destroy it, Farrell said.

    The contamination has been blamed for the deaths of four children and kidney ailments among 54,000 others. More than 13,000 children have been hospitalized and 27 people arrested in connection with the tainting.

    Melamine, which is high in nitrogen, is used to make plastics and fertilizers and experts say some amount of the chemical may be transferred from the environment during food processing. But in China's case, suppliers trying to boost output are believed to have diluted their milk, adding melamine because its nitrogen content can fool tests aimed at verifying protein content.

    Melamine can cause kidney stones, leading to kidney failure. Infants are particularly vulnerable.

    Melamine has been associated with contaminated infant formula and other Chinese products containing milk protein.

    On Wednesday, the Chinese government identified 15 more Chinese dairy companies as producing milk products contaminated with melamine, bringing the total to 20 companies. At least 100 batches of milk powder have been found to contain the chemical, according to data on the food safety administration's Web site.

    Last week, California health officials announced it discovered traces of melamine in White Rabbit candy it tested. Queensway Foods Company Inc. of California distributed the candy and says it is recalling it.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is working with state and local governments to check for and test products that could possibly be contaminated with melamine. Last Friday, the FDA warned consumers not to consume White Rabbit Candy and Mr. Brown coffee products because of possible melamine contamination.

    The vanilla-flavored candy has also been pulled from shelves in Hawaii, Asia and Britain, and tests in Singapore and New Zealand last week found White Rabbit sweets tainted with melamine. The Shanghai-based maker of the candy, Guan Sheng Yuan Co., said last week it was halting production of the sticky, taffy-like confection, an iconic brand beloved by generations of Chinese.

    The candy is sold in more than 50 countries throughout Asia and the world, including most of the Chinatowns in the United States. Overseas sales have reached $160 million over the past five years.
    Souce

  13. Join Date
    Sep 2004
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    4,631
    #13
    Quote Originally Posted by CoDer View Post
    Ano ba ikinamatay ng lola mo bogeyman?
    Old age, I reckon. Basta nagkasakit na lang siya one day, tapos bedridden na. Paminsan-minsan gumagaan yung pakiramdam, but she never fully recovered. Until one morning, hindi na siya nagising. She died at home, in her sleep.

    Matagal na yun, 1997 pa. Naalala ko lang kasi mahilig siya sa White Rabbit even when I was a kid. But if I'm to assume the worst, na may melamine na pala ang White Rabbit even as far back as the 80s, nakupo....
    Last edited by Bogeyman; October 2nd, 2008 at 10:46 PM.

  14. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    21,384
    #14
    Sa GMA7 News Saksi, may binanggit na may isang "well known" brand na meat loaf ang tainted din daw ng melamine. Ayaw muna nilang pangalanan ito, pero malamang ito yung Ma Ling.........

    Langya, peborits pa naman namin yan.

  15. Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Posts
    3,153
    #15
    issue na naman sa white rabbit...=(

    nung bata ako sarap na sarap ako sa white rabbit, until magkaruon ng issue tapos ngayon panibagong issue na naman=(

    sayang white rabbit ang sarap pa naman...

  16. Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    57,767
    #16
    I like chinese nougat. Naalala niyo ba yun? Square na white and blue din ang packaging

  17. Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Posts
    4,631
    #17
    Quote Originally Posted by Cathy_for_you View Post
    I like chinese nougat. Naalala niyo ba yun? Square na white and blue din ang packaging
    Nakow, isa pa yan. Mahilig din ako diyan nung bata pa ako. Matigas-tigas na candy, tapos may image ng Chinese junk sa wrapper.

  18. Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Posts
    1,099
    #18
    global na pala ang scare sa white rabbit, i think this marks the end for this product. hindi na'to mabibili kahit saan pa

    maybe the arrogant owner can change the name to brown rabbit and puros chocolate na lang without the milk parang cocoa, ang pakla siguro nun

Popular Chinese candy[White Rabbit] linked to tainted milk