Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Why is there no blue food?

Given that the Blueberry is actually dark Purple, and that there may actually be several edible Blue Plants and Flowers, my question is not "what blue food is there?" but WHY is there no obvious blue food?

Why is there no blue food?
blue corn and blue potaoes.
Reply:Because of where the food comes from.





Plants usually are not blue, except on the flowers themselves, which humans rarely eat. Plants tend to be green to maximise the production of energy in their cells (photosynthesis). Blue light can be absorbed, but green is useless, hence why plants are mostly green (to reflect away the pointless green light).





Animals tend to live in or around plants (for food) or yellow sands. The usual, apparent colour of water may be blue, but fish hide on the bottom of the seabed for safety, which is brown or black. The colour of the animals' skins are coloured so they can blend in and be camouflaged, which makes them brown, black, green, yellow, or whatever.





Some animals are also red. This is to make them look poisonous, and a fair few of them are.





As almost all out food comes from plants or animals, this is why food tends not to be blue. But chemicals can change the colour of food if we want to make a nice design, such as the icing on a cake.
Reply:BLUE CORN, BLUEBERRIES, BLUE POTATOES, just to name the obvious. where you stay at? under a rock?
Reply:May be you can not find blue foods, but last summer Pepsi produced a kind of coke in blue color.
Reply:Maybe because certain bright colors, like a really obvious bright sky blue, are more likely to be used by wildlife for other reasons, like....





--signaling to potential mates (blue plumage in birds),


--signaling poisonous or foul smelling prey (colors in stink-bugs or poisonous amphibians),


--camoflauge, to either hide from prey or from predators (many birds and fish species use this coloration to hide, in the sky and underwater, from predators and prey)...





See a trend here? Coloration tends to be on the outside where it serves a purpose, and not inside the animal usually, where the "food value" of the critter is.





In addition....have you ever actually eaten a *green* orange (hint, not from it being less than ripe, ok?)? Or a *blue* slice of bread?





When certain colors *do* show up in the food content of an animal, this is usually a cue that there is significant fungal and/or disease presence in the tissue, meaning it's *spoiled*.





Just my two cents.
Reply:Blue corn grows naturally w/o dyes.
Reply:If you want a really rare steak you ask for it "blue".
Reply:Blueberries look pretty blue to me
Reply:there's blue jello isn't there?
Reply:Other than flowers, blue isn't a naturally occurring color in food.
Reply:I've seen cakes covered in blue icing.





Most natural food stuffs are fairly neutral in colour.
Reply:why fishes don't fly?
Reply:blue is unappetizing
Reply:now i want a blueberry muffin, see what you did
Reply:ASK GEORGE CARLIN, HE WANTS TO KNOW TOO...
Reply:A good question, makes one wonder why there aren't more blue foods, maybe they look to unappetizing to some
Reply:You listen to George Carlin, don't you??
Reply:there r these blue corn chips
Reply:Blue M%26amp;M's
Reply:Haven't you ever seen blue jello? It's really pretty and different, even though it is technically blueberry.





There is also a variety of corn which is blue.








Have a lovely rest of the day.
Reply:Blue is a high-frequency wavelength. It's harder to get energy from it than green, yellow or red. So, few plants grow in blue.
Reply:The bits in blue cheese are blue.
Reply:blue is holy, but using it in food like blueberries is evil
Reply:oh you are so wrong. Awhile back kraft macaronni and cheese had blues clues mac and cheese and it was blue.
Reply:danish blue vein cheese it is not all blue but has blue veins running through it
Reply:Purple is more appealing coming from for example a vegetable like an eggplant and yummy fruit like grapes. Red tomatoes %26amp; strawberries. Orange carrots %26amp; oranges. Yellow squash %26amp; bananas. Green beans %26amp; kiwi.
Reply:Blue eggs and ham???
Reply:Because blue is a color that is subconsciously keyed to the word "putrid", and would you want to eat something putrid? I didn't think so.
Reply:Most food is based on natural things that are grown. Blue is not a colour that occurs in nature very often. For example there are actually not that many blue flowers.
Reply:not sure, but did you know magarine is black and has been dyed yellow, no kidding
Reply:Blue smarties.


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