Breath Savers

Breath Savers
Breath Savers
Ingredients Sorbitol, magnesium stearate, artificial flavor, aspartame, medium chain triglycerides, zinc gluconate, artificial color, polysorbate 80
Nutrition Information Per mint: food energy 5 kcal, fat 0 g, sodium 0 mg, carbohydrates 2 g, sugars 0 g, protein 0 g
Active Ingredients None (but see Neutrazin section in main article)
Flavors Peppermint, Spearmint, Wintergreen, Cinnamon, Vanilla Mint, Citrus Mist
Three-hour mints are available in Peppermint and Spearmint only.
Sugar-free? Yes
Manufacturer The Hershey Company
Year introduced 1973 (regional release, sugared)
1978 (national release, sugar-free)
Slogans / Taglines The Right Amount of Mint
Hazards Phenylalanine (in Aspartame); Food coloring

Breath Savers is a brand of mint manufactured by The Hershey Company. Breath Savers were introduced in 1973 by the Life Savers Company, a division of E.R. Squibb, in limited areas and were originally sugared. The brand became a national brand in 1978 when it replaced sugar with saccharin and became sugar-free from then on. Nabisco acquired the Life Savers Company from E.R. Squibb in 1981, and in 2000, after its merger with Kraft Foods, it sold its gum and breath mint business to Hershey. The main ingredient found in Breath Savers is sorbitol.

As the name and design suggests, Breath Savers are modeled after its Life Savers, beveled at the outer edges and having a shallow depression in the center, on both sides. Each Breath Saver is counterembossed on one side with the legend "BREATH SAVER" in raised letters about 0.3 mm high in a circular pattern around the center. They are packaged in two ways:

Breath Savers are advertised as containing "Neutrazin", an ingredient claimed to neutralize and eliminate bad breath temporarily. Neutrazin is often used today in several other mints and mint-like products.[1] It is not stated which ingredients of the ingredient list (see infobox) compose Neutrazin.

Breath Savers have also begun advertising some of their mints to contain sodium bicarbonate, an alkaline salt used in many personal hygiene products as a mechanical cleanser on the teeth and gums. It also neutralises the production of acid in the mouth, and acts as an antiseptic to help prevent infections.[2][3]

See also

References

  1. Breathsavers Mints - Hershey's Archived April 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. Malik, Y; Goyal, S (2006). "Virucidal efficacy of sodium bicarbonate on a food contact surface against feline calicivirus, a norovirus surrogate". International Journal of Food Microbiology. 109 (1–2): 160–3. doi:10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2005.08.033. PMID 16540196.
  3. Zamani, M; Sharifi Tehrani, A; Ali Abadi, AA (2007). "Evaluation of antifungal activity of carbonate and bicarbonate salts alone or in combination with biocontrol agents in control of citrus green mold". Communications in agricultural and applied biological sciences. 72 (4): 773–7. PMID 18396809.

External links


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