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MSG, or Monosodium Glutamate, faces ongoing debate regarding its safety and addiction claims. Read on to know what experts ...
When it comes to barbecue rubs, you might mix together salt, pepper, paprika, garlic powder, and more, but this unexpected ...
Anti-MSG sentiment, widely considered to have xenophobic origins, dates back to the late 1960s, when reports of diners reacting badly after consuming food containing the much-misunderstood ...
Monosodium glutamate, or MSG — a food additive that is often found in Asian cuisine — has had something of a negative reputation over the last 60 years. Some food experts insist that's unfair.
Calvin Eng, the owner of New York-based Cantonese-American restaurant Bonnie’s, isn’t shy about his love for monosodium glutamate. Case in point – he has the letters “MSG” tattooed on ...
For Seth Diamond, a visit to Madison Square Garden was like a slap shot to the face. The Georgia personal injury lawyer was ...
For years, advertising and media connected the ingredient to “Chinese Restaurant Syndrome.” Here’s what led to the misconception—and how MSG is being reclaimed today.
For years, monosodium glutamate, a food additive known as MSG, has been branded as an unhealthy processed ingredient mainly found in Chinese food, despite a lack of supporting scientific evidence.
The food additive MSG, monosodium glutamate, is not dangerous or harmful. Chinese restaurant syndrome doesn't exist.