Breast Milk Lollipops, meant to mimic the flavor of a mother's milk - moooo -
Mothers looking to give their children a unique, yet familiar, candy treat are in luck. A lollipop company based in Austin, Texas called Lollyphile is offering new Breast Milk Lollipops, meant to mimic the flavor of a mother's milk.
According to Lollyphile's website, numerous mothers shared their breast milk with the company's "flavor specialists," until they were able to turn the flavor into a candy.
"I don't know if it's because I'm getting older, but it seems like all of my friends are having babies these days," Jason Darling, the owner of Lollyphile, said in a statement. "Sure, the kids are all crazy cute, but what slowly dawned on me was that my friends were actually producing milk so delicious it could turn a screaming, furious child into a docile, contented one. I knew I had to capture that flavor."
Lollyphile maintains that the lollipops do not contain any actual breast milk, joking that it would require "armies of pumping women."
The limited edition lollipops aren't cheap. Four will cost you $10. A case of 36 Breast Milk Lollipops costs $58.
Read more: -
An example is the Malay Annals preserved all by British Historian There Richard O.
ReplyDeleteMy website pasożyty badania