The footage itself seems to be culled from different sources, judging by the constantly changing contrast and colour casts. Voice-over is bland and annoying. Definitely not subbing this one.
I'm sorry, but if you re going to do a video and present it as factual, you might want to do your history and research first. The beginning of this video is incorrect, only one of the brothers invented it and then showed it to his brother. John Harvey Kellogg originally created it as a healthy food for the patients of the sanitarium in which he worked, and its inception was functional: it was supposed to be healthy and deliberately bland while offering relief from indigestion. They were not trying to make bread and it was not left uncontrolled.
Give it another listen. It's even worse. He said they "left boiled wheat for too long, and it turned into corn flakes." How the living eff does boiled WHEAT turn into CORN flakes?
I've never trusted TH-cam to get information. I've discovered that practically all TH-cam videos give out disinformation. They distort history and current events all the time (TH-cam is a cult organisation).
@@Orang315 They can make cornflakes "organic and without sugar" However, corporate companies do business with other corporate companies, including the sugar company. And the other reason why sugar is put into many of our foods is because sugar is addictive (and unhealthy), so you buy more of those products. Large food companies don't care about your health; they only care about their sales figures.
I have not purchased corn flakes or any breakfast cereal in decades. I bought it when my kids were young but not now. The price is high for what you get.
The video was stolen from another channel that posed about how cornflakes are made from 4 years ago. The original video was properly detailed without the false history of the cereal.
"Undergoes a separation process to remove the husk" But you don't tell us how this is done. It's the most interesting part of the process and you skip it. Ypu may as well say corn goes in one end and flakes come out the other end.
So Kelloggs UK produces one million boxes of cornflakes every day. But those boxes are only 60% full. If they were filled to the top Kelloggs would only need to produce about 700,000 boxes per day, saving hundreds of tons of cardboard and inner packaging each week.This company is one of the biggest waste producers in the UK, in extra unwarranted packaging; so really nothing to be proud of.
Did the Ai make a mistake when it wrote your script....nah even Ai reads wikipedia. how did you get the history so wrong. unless Ai. Also Ai voice has there is never really a break in the dialogue. Its youtube what is an extra 15 secs to breathe and let the watcher focus.
This video is describing artificial flakes created from corn flour. There almost liquid flour is extruded through holes then chopped to pretend to be flattened corn kennels. This is my interpretation of the commentary. The script writer is trying to maintain the myth of individually flattened corn kernels.
90% of the Calories come from carbohydrates (72 in 80 total). Originally they were made with wheat but now they are indeed made from corn. All of this processing surely removes a large portion of natural nutrition.
the more cooked and processed anything is the less nutritious it becomes…except maybe meat and some vegetables. Even the simple process at home of grinding nuts reduces the nutrients the longer you grind. The heat is the destroyer.
@gregdoyle829. TH-cam gives out disinformation on purpose on many subjects. It's not only about keeping people ignorant of their history, but also about keeping people ignorant of what's going on in present times.
@@redblade8160or someone wanted to make a quick buck and didn’t care about researching. But yeah. Go with the corn flakes conspiracy angle. Let me guess. MAGA?
Dry cereal products are an inexpensive grain foods which are comparatively expensive to buy at retail. That said, I love a bowl of cereal with cold milk at some of my meals. Thanks….
I applaud your effort but I didn't learn a great deal about making corn flakes - what does the extruder look like, how do the flakes get that shape, what part of the corn is used, what part discarded, how can moist hot air make the flakes crispy, etc, etc. And we see the same video shots over and over and over again - a minute of video stretched into 6 minutes. Got tired of seeing the factory so many times. Thumbs down.
You’ve got to love this type of video. Thanks for telling me “they source their corn from Argentina,” that’s me never buying any of Kellogg’s food ever again. So a huge thank you for the heads up. 👌😜🤘 m-E-m
I would like to know if they use sulfuric acids type acids in the water taking the skins off the kernels of corn? I know this is used in wet milling some grains to separate different parts of the grains.
This so-called documentary is a disaster. The subject is interesting and it would be great if we could learn something but instead we get the worst video editing job I've ever seen. The footage is a random nelange of shots that are out of sequence and therefore make no sense and the script is equally badly done, bearing almost no relation to the images. If this is what all your videos are like, please find something else to do.
Its a carb energy food first of all. you are not getting all that much nutrition from corn to begin with. The B vitamins and trace minerals that corns have are mostly heat stable, so its fine. I personally don't eat cereal but this is less processing than I expected, it basically just milled and shaped corn.
A middle school student would not make the mistake made in the voiceover for the (images which don't generally match the voiceover): "...makes 1 million cereal boxes", which is wrong. It should be: ..."makes 1 million boxes of cereal". There is a difference in the meaning of those two statements!
Cornflakes are not what they used to be. Nowadays, too expensive for a cheaper horrid tasting version. Crunchy nuts are not nice any more. Don’t buy them now.
Why would a cereal factory in the UK buy corn from Argentina and pay for shipping the full longitudinal length of the Atlantic instead of from Canada or the USA and pay for for shorter, latitudinal trans-Atlantic shipping?
I lived in England in the mid-sixties they did not eat corn or corn product. Corn was pig feed. They did not even sell popcorn in they sold ice cream that movie theater
that Kellogs factory is the largest in Europe and is located where my great grandparents once ran a farm the lands of which was sold off to form part of the new Kellogs factory way back in the 1950's. I don't eat Kellogs Cornflakes! No particular reason mind - I don't eat that much breakfast let alone breakfast cereal which isn't as healthy as is made out. I do agree with someone else's observation in terms of the facts of the origin of cornflakes in part. but an ok video non-the-less.
I don’t like all of the cleaning processes. Exactly what is done during these processes. I would love to know how simple the process was in the beginning
Millions of boxes each day. There's no way. Maybe all the factories Kellogg's owns all over the world but this factory does not make and box millions of boxes a day.
You show in your vid some filthy hand grabbing and feeling the finished product ! I do I know if this guy didn't just come out of the bathroom? Or has Covid? Or was digging in his nose/ He wasn't wearing gloves! I'll never buy Corn Flakes again !
This stuff can sit on shelves for years and never rot because it's dry. It has nothing in it anymore that good for you so what's the use of it? It just fills a hole in your stomach, nothing more. You may just as well eat the box.
More like a commercial than an informative video? Also, after all those processes one has to wonder just how nutritious the corn itself is. Might as well be cardboard??
Like everything not all cold cereals are the same. The problem with much of our western diet is not eating a bowl of cold cereal every day. People including children have been eating cold cereal for decades. Myself and my siblings grew up with cold cereal as one of our breakfast choices and even night time snacks. We all grew up generally healthy and within typical height and weight ranges. No, the problem with much of our western diet is eating too much junk food, too much sugary foods, too much sweet drinks including soda pop etc. I and my family which is a product of the 70's and 80's, eating at fast food restaurants was a treat or because on a certain days our parents had too much going on, so off to McDonalds, Kentucky fried chicken, Burger King, Taco Time etc. it may have been. Soda pop was a treat, usually during summer holidays or over Christmas holidays. Yes, our mom would bake cakes and pies, but our consumption of such was controlled by mom and dad. A bag of Doritos or other chips was maybe a weekend thing... For tv or movie time a bowl of modestly buttered popcorn was had for us kids. But! But the big thing is, we were not just sitting on our a$$es each day, all day staring only at a screen and yes we were a product of the tv generation so we had screens to stare at. But we played, mostly outside with our friends or even alone. I would play making roads for my hot wheels cars in mom's garden, or play with my bucket of army men, or even doing things in the house to keep us motivated and busy to not just junk out on sweets and other unhealthy foods staring only at a tv screen. Eating cold cereal was not an issue because it was part of a balanced and varied in home diet where we ate home made meals 98% of the time.😎👍
It always amuses me when some colon-cleanse salesman talks about finding a 10-year old corn flake in somebody's colon. Even if it had a date stamped on it, it was mush before it got to the mouth.
This is a terrible description of how cornflakes are made, more like a Kellogg’s safty announcement. We want to know how the cornmeal is separated, how the cornflakes are made might be an idea too.
Quality control is slipping! I just found a huge heavy hard brown object in my Frosted Flakes. Grossed me out!! Won’t be eating them for a while! Yuck.
Handling Food with Bare Hands and no Masks or Hair/Beard Nets, that does not pass Food Inspection Guidelines, did Kellogg’s have any in put on this Video? Have they approved it? I hope not.
nobody ever review the text anymore? lots of repetition, redundancies, imprecision and boredom. Did an Ai wrote this for you? i hope you do better next time, or not, i will not be around to check it out for sure.
There is so much stuff what was the first again I can't remember so can I restart the video because if I was too far at the video I need to restart it cuz I don't remember what was first and I'm so sorry I'm literally crying right now I'm so so so so so so so so so sorry but is it okay to just turn over the video again I really need to start over the video because I didn't get to hear all of that of the conflicts like mixes to her and everything else I need like some some some some some ideas like to remember it so and I like start over the video please say yes because if you don't make me I'm going to not watch your videos anymore and that's going to be bad a shooter what's a shooter what's a characters I don't know all of these things but I think I need to learn more about yourself I think I need to go on primary High School I think oh my goodness this is going to be so bad I don't know nothing and I'm just going I'm just going out primaries what is the meanest teacher but Turtle said sadness Taylor is a nice teacher best time is the most meanest teacher I do not want to be with Ms Taylor Miss Taylor is a meanest teacher I do not never ever ever ever want to talk to her again and
"...but left boiled wheat for too long, which turned into corn flakes."
Huh?
what about corn whiskey?
@@deedoyle4069 Bourbon
Really rubbish commentary. Dodgy information. Confusion of wheat and corn (maize) in early part of supposed history.
Factory worker here: the videos and images used in this video are so totally random with what is being said in the video. This video is sub par.
The footage itself seems to be culled from different sources, judging by the constantly changing contrast and colour casts. Voice-over is bland and annoying. Definitely not subbing this one.
I'm sorry, but if you re going to do a video and present it as factual, you might want to do your history and research first. The beginning of this video is incorrect, only one of the brothers invented it and then showed it to his brother. John Harvey Kellogg originally created it as a healthy food for the patients of the sanitarium in which he worked, and its inception was functional: it was supposed to be healthy and deliberately bland while offering relief from indigestion. They were not trying to make bread and it was not left uncontrolled.
Give it another listen. It's even worse. He said they "left boiled wheat for too long, and it turned into corn flakes." How the living eff does boiled WHEAT turn into CORN flakes?
I've never trusted TH-cam to get information. I've discovered that practically all TH-cam videos give out disinformation. They distort history and current events all the time (TH-cam is a cult organisation).
True. And the sanitarium was the start of the Seventh Day Adventists.
Can they make them organic without sugar ?
@@Orang315
They can make cornflakes "organic and without sugar" However, corporate companies do business with other corporate companies, including the sugar company. And the other reason why sugar is put into many of our foods is because sugar is addictive (and unhealthy), so you buy more of those products. Large food companies don't care about your health; they only care about their sales figures.
I have not purchased corn flakes or any breakfast cereal in decades. I bought it when my kids were young but not now. The price is high for what you get.
The video was stolen from another channel that posed about how cornflakes are made from 4 years ago. The original video was properly detailed without the false history of the cereal.
I was wondering how they got corn flakes from wheat dough?
Me too!
Why do they show images of fresh sweet corn on the cob being processed when corn flakes are made with mature rock hard dent corn?
Need to produce flake year round but don't harvest corn year round. corns are dried to preserve it, moist food item molds very easily
@@humorss corn flakes are not made from sweet fresh corn. They are made from dry dent corn which is 95% of the US corn crop.
You said that wheat was used in the beginning, then all at once they are using corn.
They're special Kellogg's Corn Wheat Flakes! 🤣
"Undergoes a separation process to remove the husk" But you don't tell us how this is done. It's the most interesting part of the process and you skip it. Ypu may as well say corn goes in one end and flakes come out the other end.
Lol
So Kelloggs UK produces one million boxes of cornflakes every day. But those boxes are only 60% full. If they were filled to the top Kelloggs would only need to produce about 700,000 boxes per day, saving hundreds of tons of cardboard and inner packaging each week.This company is one of the biggest waste producers in the UK, in extra unwarranted packaging; so really nothing to be proud of.
Forgot the addition of iron filings.
Watching this, I learned that every one of dozens of manufacturing steps is "essential" or "crucial" in accomplishing whatever each step does.
😂😂😅😅 very shallow video
Exactly
Did the Ai make a mistake when it wrote your script....nah even Ai reads wikipedia. how did you get the history so wrong. unless Ai. Also Ai voice has there is never really a break in the dialogue. Its youtube what is an extra 15 secs to breathe and let the watcher focus.
This video is describing artificial flakes created from corn flour. There almost liquid flour is extruded through holes then chopped to pretend to be flattened corn kennels.
This is my interpretation of the commentary. The script writer is trying to maintain the myth of individually flattened corn kernels.
90% of the Calories come from carbohydrates (72 in 80 total).
Originally they were made with wheat but now they are indeed made from corn.
All of this processing surely removes a large portion of natural nutrition.
the more cooked and processed anything is the less nutritious it becomes…except maybe meat and some vegetables. Even the simple process at home of grinding nuts reduces the nutrients the longer you grind. The heat is the destroyer.
Corn flakes being made is so cool do you like yours with milk or straight up as a snack
Both, depends on my mood 😅
How can they get the history of Corn Flake wrong?
@gregdoyle829.
TH-cam gives out disinformation on purpose on many subjects. It's not only about keeping people ignorant of their history, but also about keeping people ignorant of what's going on in present times.
@@redblade8160or someone wanted to make a quick buck and didn’t care about researching. But yeah. Go with the corn flakes conspiracy angle. Let me guess. MAGA?
@@boxsterman77 let me guess Biden?, dont forget half way what you were doing, and dont try to trip over your own fed, whilst ruining the economy!.
Dry cereal products are an inexpensive grain foods which are comparatively expensive to buy at retail. That said, I love a bowl of cereal with cold milk at some of my meals. Thanks….
I applaud your effort but I didn't learn a great deal about making corn flakes - what does the extruder look like, how do the flakes get that shape, what part of the corn is used, what part discarded, how can moist hot air make the flakes crispy, etc, etc. And we see the same video shots over and over and over again - a minute of video stretched into 6 minutes. Got tired of seeing the factory so many times. Thumbs down.
But, but, quality is maintained he says!
Keep up the good work
You’ve got to love this type of video. Thanks for telling me “they source their corn from Argentina,” that’s me never buying any of Kellogg’s food ever again. So a huge thank you for the heads up.
👌😜🤘 m-E-m
I would like to know if they use sulfuric acids type acids in the water taking the skins off the kernels of corn? I know this is used in wet milling some grains to separate different parts of the grains.
This so-called documentary is a disaster. The subject is interesting and it would be great if we could learn something but instead we get the worst video editing job I've ever seen. The footage is a random nelange of shots that are out of sequence and therefore make no sense and the script is equally badly done, bearing almost no relation to the images. If this is what all your videos are like, please find something else to do.
Worth driving to Kelloggs Trafford park just to smell them cooking
And to see 'Zippy' around Christmas time!
Garbage food.
Wow 😯😳😳 to complicated work
Very interesting process. I love corn flakes.
After seeing this video ... Will you eat this highly heavily processed Corn Flakes ???
If you eat so ?? What will you reap as nutritious?
ברו😎😝☠️
God bless the farmer 🙏🇺🇲
He'd tell you the next part of the life of a cornflake, but it's a cereal (serial)....
corn flakes . corn flakes,corn flakes,corn flakes, corn flakes,corn flakes,corn flakes, corn flakes,corn flakes, corn flakes.
thank you Vivian .
Could you also explain how they shrink the cereal box more and more each month
😂😂😂😂😂
Seems like anything nutritional in the corn kernels are obliterated with so much soaking and heating.
Its a carb energy food first of all. you are not getting all that much nutrition from corn to begin with. The B vitamins and trace minerals that corns have are mostly heat stable, so its fine. I personally don't eat cereal but this is less processing than I expected, it basically just milled and shaped corn.
A middle school student would not make the mistake made in the voiceover for the (images which don't generally match the voiceover):
"...makes 1 million cereal boxes", which is wrong. It should be: ..."makes 1 million boxes of cereal".
There is a difference in the meaning of those two statements!
Kelloggs were looking for a cheap food to feed American slaves. They found it.
The wheat turned into corn flakes because Jesus was there. You should have seen what he did with water.
I want to ask what machine that they used when milling
In conclusion....
Corn is Flakey.
Thanks for the video 😂.
The crud on those machines should be enough to make anyone want to stop eating factory made breakfast cereals.
After seeing all the processes, I wonder how the original flakes tasted. It would be great if NewEnglandWildlifeAndMore got hold of an old packet.
Are there any Corn Flake factories in the US?
Love Kelloggs Cornflakes & Sugar Frosted Flakes😋1/28/24🇺🇸9:40pm✨️
Corn makes cereal boxes? I thought it made flakes.
Kellogg's Cornflakes used to taste like a fresh summer day, but they have black bits in them now and don't taste as good.
i like CORN FLAKES
Cornflakes are not what they used to be. Nowadays, too expensive for a cheaper horrid tasting version. Crunchy nuts are not nice any more. Don’t buy them now.
Great. They just need to make them without BHT. We refuse to eat that.
when is the sugar coat applied
32 year Kellogg vet. Sorry but not even close.
Why would a cereal factory in the UK buy corn from Argentina and pay for shipping the full longitudinal length of the Atlantic instead of from Canada or the USA and pay for for shorter, latitudinal trans-Atlantic shipping?
I lived in England in the mid-sixties they did not eat corn or corn product. Corn was pig feed. They did not even sell popcorn in they sold ice cream that movie theater
Calling corn flakes a healthy nutritious breakfast is a complete lie!
Donuts and coffee: THAT'S a healthy, nutritious breakfast!
Better than other things you have eaten buddy!
I read that the box costs more than the ingredients in Kellogg corn flakes. and not the best nutrition.
The video images and what is said don't fit together.
I learnt nothing from this long film.I still have no idea how corn flakes are made.
I'm cornfused so the packaging is make from corn ?
that Kellogs factory is the largest in Europe and is located where my great grandparents once ran a farm the lands of which was sold off to form part of the new Kellogs factory way back in the 1950's. I don't eat Kellogs Cornflakes! No particular reason mind - I don't eat that much breakfast let alone breakfast cereal which isn't as healthy as is made out. I do agree with someone else's observation in terms of the facts of the origin of cornflakes in part. but an ok video non-the-less.
"healthy, nutritious"??? are you for real?
and they put SUGAR on it...(healthy, )
I wonder if European Corn Flakes use a different formula than that used in the United States.
WTF is it raw corn or dried corn???
Propaganda video. No mention of the huge amounts of insecticide needed to grow the corn.
I used to love corn flakes, but now that all the corn is a GMO product, I dont eat it anymore.
I don’t like all of the cleaning processes. Exactly what is done during these processes. I would love to know how simple the process was in the beginning
Millions of boxes each day. There's no way. Maybe all the factories Kellogg's owns all over the world but this factory does not make and box millions of boxes a day.
Really unhealthy- best avoid all “cereals “
Speak for yourself
I'm 61, and I've eaten Corn Flakes and other "unhealthy" cereals all my life! ... Never done me any harm!
You show in your vid some filthy hand grabbing and feeling the finished product ! I do I know if this guy didn't just come out of the bathroom? Or has Covid? Or was digging in his nose/ He wasn't wearing gloves! I'll never buy Corn Flakes again !
Hands without gloves and faces without masks. Cornflakes are contaminated
I guess that explains why millions of people every day, for the past 100 years, drop dead from cornflake infections.
@@ROGER2095 I had a severe Cornflake infection, but I wasn't hospitalised, I was "cerealised!" 🤣
Cretin.
I miss the green rooster from the early 1990’s
Why don't you use crude oil?
Fırında tepeleme girip tepeleme çıkıyor nasıl gerçekleşiyor yada bişiyor
Boiled wheat turned into corn flakes? Did you do any research, or proofreading? I am no dumber for having watched this.
This stuff can sit on shelves for years and never rot because it's dry. It has nothing in it anymore that good for you so what's the use of it? It just fills a hole in your stomach, nothing more. You may just as well eat the box.
nutritious ???
More like a commercial than an informative video? Also, after all those processes one has to wonder just how nutritious the corn itself is. Might as well be cardboard??
ya they used their hand to grab the corn flakes 6:19 , maybe they should look at using gloves or a scoop
Cereal is anything but healthy lmao
Depends, unsweetened regular cornflakes are fine. Most of those bullshit breakfast cereals contain 60g of sugar per 100 tho :/
Like everything not all cold cereals are the same.
The problem with much of our western diet is not eating a bowl of cold cereal every day. People including children have been eating cold cereal for decades. Myself and my siblings grew up with cold cereal as one of our breakfast choices and even night time snacks. We all grew up generally healthy and within typical height and weight ranges.
No, the problem with much of our western diet is eating too much junk food, too much sugary foods, too much sweet drinks including soda pop etc.
I and my family which is a product of the 70's and 80's, eating at fast food restaurants was a treat or because on a certain days our parents had too much going on, so off to McDonalds, Kentucky fried chicken, Burger King, Taco Time etc. it may have been.
Soda pop was a treat, usually during summer holidays or over Christmas holidays.
Yes, our mom would bake cakes and pies, but our consumption of such was controlled by mom and dad.
A bag of Doritos or other chips was maybe a weekend thing... For tv or movie time a bowl of modestly buttered popcorn was had for us kids.
But!
But the big thing is, we were not just sitting on our a$$es each day, all day staring only at a screen and yes we were a product of the tv generation so we had screens to stare at. But we played, mostly outside with our friends or even alone. I would play making roads for my hot wheels cars in mom's garden, or play with my bucket of army men, or even doing things in the house to keep us motivated and busy to not just junk out on sweets and other unhealthy foods staring only at a tv screen.
Eating cold cereal was not an issue because it was part of a balanced and varied in home diet where we ate home made meals 98% of the time.😎👍
It's healthier than you attitude about it, that's for sure.
Wow, how complicated...
Turn to mush after 2 seconds in milk yuk...
It always amuses me when some colon-cleanse salesman talks about finding a 10-year old corn flake in somebody's colon. Even if it had a date stamped on it, it was mush before it got to the mouth.
I used to love corn flakes - but then they took the gluten out and with that, went all the flavor. Don't eat them anymore.
This is a terrible description of how cornflakes are made, more like a Kellogg’s safty announcement. We want to know how the cornmeal is separated, how the cornflakes are made might be an idea too.
I might be crazy, but this video looks like a combination of stolen images and a script put together by ChatGPT.
Does it look like they were trying to make bread to you
What about mold?
Eggs bacon toast milk, now that's b-fast not this.
AI generated audio
Quality control is slipping! I just found a huge heavy hard brown object in my Frosted Flakes. Grossed me out!! Won’t be eating them for a while! Yuck.
Handling Food with Bare Hands and no Masks or Hair/Beard Nets, that does not pass Food Inspection Guidelines, did Kellogg’s have any in put on this Video? Have they approved it? I hope not.
Don't eat any of that garbage.
I stopped eating that crap years ago. Besides being too expensive, I doubt it has any nutritional value whatsoever.
crispy maybe
I have an idea that would make billions of dollars. But dont know where to start.
There is a great photo of a young George Harrison enjoying a bowl of Kellogg's Corn Flakes.
yo making these video from diffrent clip wag dag
Screw it im making a bowl
Talk about processed this is the ultimate is processed nothing left but garbage
nobody ever review the text anymore? lots of repetition, redundancies, imprecision and boredom. Did an Ai wrote this for you? i hope you do better next time, or not, i will not be around to check it out for sure.
Sell more by filling the farken bags.
There is so much stuff what was the first again I can't remember so can I restart the video because if I was too far at the video I need to restart it cuz I don't remember what was first and I'm so sorry I'm literally crying right now I'm so so so so so so so so so sorry but is it okay to just turn over the video again I really need to start over the video because I didn't get to hear all of that of the conflicts like mixes to her and everything else I need like some some some some some ideas like to remember it so and I like start over the video please say yes because if you don't make me I'm going to not watch your videos anymore and that's going to be bad a shooter what's a shooter what's a characters I don't know all of these things but I think I need to learn more about yourself I think I need to go on primary High School I think oh my goodness this is going to be so bad I don't know nothing and I'm just going I'm just going out primaries what is the meanest teacher but Turtle said sadness Taylor is a nice teacher best time is the most meanest teacher I do not want to be with Ms Taylor Miss Taylor is a meanest teacher I do not never ever ever ever want to talk to her again and
Corn flakes are worse than Cheerios. Yuck! If you have to add sugar to make it taste better then it's not worth buying.👎
Cheerios have the least amount of sugar of any cold cereal. Only cereal I eat. NOT Honey-Nut Cheerios.