Yes, it is safe to ingest. The only way it would be bad for you is if you pour a gallon of the dust down your throat. Only a little of the dust actually goes on a cake or a cookie or whatever you are putting it on.
That's pretty flawed logic. There are many products that are barely or poorly tested before they are brought to market. Beware of following the consumer masses - most people are incredibly uninformed.
Yea, its flawed, but infact your logic is flawed as well. Practically every gram of modern day prepared food or beverage contains SOMETHING in it that will cause cancer, disease, or disorder about 50 years down the road.
Like I said before, you use such a miniscule amount of luster dust on the food that it really doesn't matter.
Certain chemicals are more toxic than others. Before people knew how toxic cigarettes were, marketers tried to pass them off as totally healthy (if not beneficial)... which consumers bought into because they didn't know better.
Consumers really have to do their homework. Everything is about calculated risk.
can you talk louder?
catqueen1029 2 months ago
The alcohol dries quickly so, yes the lustre dust will dry.
lesleylrt 1 year ago
does the lustre dust still dry????
ditte46 1 year ago
do you wait until your RI is dry?
dizzymaiden 2 years ago
I am also unclear on whether luster dust is truly safe to ingest...
BrandyManhattan 2 years ago
Yes, it is safe to ingest. The only way it would be bad for you is if you pour a gallon of the dust down your throat. Only a little of the dust actually goes on a cake or a cookie or whatever you are putting it on.
If it weren't safe, people wouldn't use it.
HikariHime29 2 years ago
"If it weren't safe, people wouldn't use it."
That's pretty flawed logic. There are many products that are barely or poorly tested before they are brought to market. Beware of following the consumer masses - most people are incredibly uninformed.
BrandyManhattan 2 years ago
Yea, its flawed, but infact your logic is flawed as well. Practically every gram of modern day prepared food or beverage contains SOMETHING in it that will cause cancer, disease, or disorder about 50 years down the road.
Like I said before, you use such a miniscule amount of luster dust on the food that it really doesn't matter.
HikariHime29 2 years ago
Certain chemicals are more toxic than others. Before people knew how toxic cigarettes were, marketers tried to pass them off as totally healthy (if not beneficial)... which consumers bought into because they didn't know better.
Consumers really have to do their homework. Everything is about calculated risk.
BrandyManhattan 2 years ago
You waste alot of dust doing it this way, instead add liquid TO the dust, a little at a time, using a dropper.
Diamond1887 3 years ago 8
Thank you for posting this, i could never get this right, i will try this. Thanks for posting
nmarz27 3 years ago
The cookies are beautiful. Is lustre dust edible or not? Some said it is, some said it's not.
amaryllisjaune 3 years ago
Great video. Watching this makes me more comfortable in wanting to try this method of decorating.
Thanks!
cakeqwn 3 years ago