how lacolombe or paradise roaster compares on the polyphenol department?
Posted by jesuslewis on August 18th, 2017
Hi
Sounds to me like they're trying to market to fitness nuts who might be gullible enough to trust any scientific sounding health claims made using big words or concepts they don't understand - like alkaline water, gluten free foods, etc. It's common in the world of nutritional supplements, and it's even started to happen with coffee - I've also heard of a cafe capitalizing on the "bulletproof coffee" craze claiming to remove mycotoxins from the beans they use.
But 1000 times more of anything should sound ridiculous to even the uneducated consumer. I don't get it.
Thanks
I didn't find the right solution from the Internet.
References: http://coffeegeek.com/forums/coffee/general/723751
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