Urea is a chemical that is excreted in all mammals' urine. It is used in fertilizers, as a chemical feed stock for other syntheses, in the making of explosives, and in pollution reduction systems for diesel engines, among other things, but not is food. So there shouldn't be a problem even if it did come from pig urine. Further, for industrial purposes now, urea is synthesized from ammonia and carbon dioxide, and so does not derive from animal products at all.
Yellow 5 is Tartrazine, a synthetic azo dye derived from petroleum. It is derived from raw chemicals, not from animal products.
Urea can turn yellow due to the degradation of urea into ammonia and biuret under certain conditions, such as exposure to high temperatures or alkaline environments. This process can result in the formation of colored compounds, which can give the urea a yellow hue.
It's called the Bosch-Meiser urea process. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urea
Urea is typically 45-46% nitrogen.
The urea cycle, which occurs in the liver, converts ammonia to urea. The urea cycle involves a series of reactions that ultimately result in the production of urea, which is then excreted by the kidneys in urine. This process helps to safely remove excess ammonia from the body.
Yellow 5 dye, also known as tartrazine, is found in the yellow M&M's.
yellow 5 is pork and yellow 6 and yellow 5 lake are not pork
Yellow5 is a stance that is made from pork
Urea can turn yellow due to the degradation of urea into ammonia and biuret under certain conditions, such as exposure to high temperatures or alkaline environments. This process can result in the formation of colored compounds, which can give the urea a yellow hue.
true
No. Pretty much all food dyes are based on benzene (tar) molecules. They are not derived from animal products.
well, obviously the beef in the pork would porkify that yellow chicken in the drawer to the left
It is called Urea. Urea is basically protein waste. It is actually 5% protein waste and the rest is water. This urea-water combination is called urine.
No. Pretty much all food dyes are based on benzene (tar) molecules. They are not derived from animal products.http://wiki.answers.com/Is_urea_and_yellow_5_pork#ixzz16qBzIT7q
I think it is a food colorant also known as sunset yellow. Source: http://www.foodadditivesworld.com/sunset-yellow.html
Goodbye pork pie
It gets rid of Urea. Urea is why your pee is yellow. It also gets rid of extra water. That's why pee is can mix with water. Also, your pee has bacteria in it, That's why you cant drink your own pee.
5 - 20mg/dl