Soylent’s new snack bar, packing 12.5 percent of your daily nutrients, supposedly “makes the afternoon slump a thing of the past.” But that may only be true if that “slump” doesn’t involve you over a toilet.
According to a discussion on Soylent’s website and several Reddit threads, customers say that some of the bars caused them gastrointestinal distress, including nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. On the Soylent thread, user Raylingh has tallied 33 reports since September 7, just two months after the company started making the bars. Generally, customers say that stomach problems arise a few hours after eating a bad bar and pass within a day or two with no other symptoms. These shared illnesses easily meet the description of food poisoning, and many users have ruled out the possibility of food allergies, noting that they had eaten the bars and other Soylent products in the past with no problems.
The reports could become a sticky mess for the bars’ maker, Rosa Labs, which made a splash two years ago with its first Soylent product, a meal-replacement drink. The company quickly tried to minimize the issue, noting the small number of reports. Rosa Labs aggressively defended its quality control after extensive internal testing. In an official statement, the company said: “After these reports, we have retrieved remaining bars from our consumers and have personally consumed many of the remaining bars without adverse effects. We have also sent them for further microbiological testing and all tests have come back negative. Based on this we remain very confident in the safety of the bars.”
A source with knowledge of Soylent’s production said that the company is spending tens of thousands of dollars on testing and has investigated all ingredients for potential contamination. The company’s leading theory thus far is that some customers have a sensitivity or intolerance—rather than an allergy—to an ingredient in the bars. Those elements include algal flour, a sugar from beets called Isomaltooligosaccharide, and vitamins. However, the bars’ soy and the artificial sweetener, sucralose, are most suspect of causing an intolerance.


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