Is Food Lion Omazing Orange Orange Flavored Soda plastic bottle healthy? A closer look at the label

Food Lion Omazing Orange Soda scores very low because high fructose corn syrup, brominated vegetable oil, and synthetic dyes drive the formula.

Illustration for a label review of Food Lion Omazing Orange Orange Flavored Soda plastic bottle
Food Lion Omazing Orange Orange Flavored Soda plastic bottle product image

Blume score

1/ 100

Very low score - soda

This report uses Blume product data, ingredient notes, and FDA label-reading rules. It is general shopping context, not medical advice.

Short answer

Very low. The main concerns are high fructose corn syrup, brominated vegetable oil, Red 40, Yellow 6, and other additive-heavy ingredients.

Why the score is low

Ingredient risk map

High Fructose Corn Syrup
Brominated Vegetable Oil
Red 40
Yellow 6
Natural Flavor
Ester Gum

Ingredient notes

High Fructose Corn Syrup

This is the main sweetener and a major reason soda labels score poorly. It adds sugar without useful nutrients.

Brominated Vegetable Oil

Used in some citrus drinks to keep oils evenly suspended. It is a processing aid, not a nutritional ingredient.

Red 40

A synthetic color additive that changes appearance, not quality. It is common in brightly colored drinks.

Yellow 6

Another synthetic dye used to adjust color. It does not improve the drink's nutritional value.

Potassium Benzoate

A preservative that helps extend shelf life. It is functional, but it also marks the drink as more industrial.

What to compare in store

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FAQ

Why does this orange soda score very low?

Because it uses high fructose corn syrup, brominated vegetable oil, synthetic dyes, and preservatives to build the drink.

Are the dyes the biggest issue?

They are one part of it, but the bigger concern is the overall additive-heavy formula and the sugar load from HFCS.

What is the simplest label improvement to look for?

A shorter ingredient list with no brominated vegetable oil and fewer synthetic colors.

Sources and method

Product and ingredient signals come from the Blume product database. The label-reading context below is included on every product report so the article stays tied to public food-label rules.

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