The Spanish Agency for Food Safety and Nutrition (AESAN), dependent on the Ministry of Consumption, has learned, through the European Food Alert Network (RASFF), of an alert notification issued by the Finnish health authorities regarding the presence of plastic fragments, in the caramelos 'Cup Cake Candy' from China.To get more news about chinese candies, you can visit shine news official website.

According to the information available, the initial distribution has been to the autonomous communities of Andalusia, Asturias, the Canary Islands, Catalonia, Castilla y León, Castilla-La Mancha, the Basque Country, Extremadura, Galicia, MadridMelilla, Murcia and the Valencian Community, although it cannot be ruled out that there may be redistributions to other autonomous communities.

Caramelos 'Cup Cake Candy' |AESAN
This information has been transferred to the competent authorities of the autonomous communities through the Coordinated System for Rapid Information Exchange (SCIRI), in order to verify the withdrawal of the affected products from the marketing channels.

People who have products affected by this alert at home are recommended to refrain from consuming them.
The word “octopus” is the singular form of octopuses, and the word “spaghetto” is the singular form of spaghetti.

While it’s technically not incorrect to call an individual M&M’s candy an “M&M,” the brand’s parent company — Mars, Incorporated — refers to each colorful bit of candy-coated chocolate as a “lentil.”
Looking at the brand’s official website, it’s easy to see why many of the candy’s consumers or casual fans might be unaware they’ve been snacking on “lentils” this whole time. The word seems to appear in only a few press releases, product descriptions or listings for M&M’s-themed merchandise, such as the official M&M’s Lentil Coin Purse, or the M&M’s Drip Lentil Stud Tee.

Lentils,” however, appears to be a common term for all sorts of similarly shaped chocolate candies, with distributors and confectioners across the globe embracing the term for the last century or so. A European brand of candy-coated chocolates called Lentilky, for example, was first produced in Moravia, in the now-Czech Republic, over 110 years ago, according to the Prague Morning. And the inspiration for M&M’s may have even come from a candy first marketed by Nestle as “Chocolate Lentils” in the 1930s, Mashed once reported, citing Nestle U.K. archivist Alex Hutchinson.

There’s also plenty of evidence to suggest that the makers of Skittles, made by the Wrigley Company (itself a subsidiary of Mars, Incorporated), refer to individual Skittles candies as “lentils,” according to data from the back end of the official Skittles website, as well as trademark applications available online.
Consumers should probably be happy about that, too. Before “lentils” was the default term, French confectioners in the 18th and 19th centuries made a specific type of tiny chocolate candy that is believed to be a precursor to lentil-shaped candies to come — and it had an objectively worse name.