We Tested Every Coffee Creamer Brand and Ranked Them From Worst to Best

That swirl of beige you shake into your cup before the day starts has a name on the lid. Nestlé's. And it contains an ingredient the FDA ordered erased from American shelves in 2018. Banned here. Not in some far-off country, here. So why is it still swirling in your cup? Why did Nestlé alone get a quiet exemption when every other maker had to comply? And what does the word creamer even mean when there is no cream in it? Partially hydrogenated oil. Artificial trans fat. The kind regulators called no longer safe to eat. The carton on your counter says none of this. And that is just the beginning of what these labels are not telling you. We found the safe pours too. 📺 Watch the entire video for more details! About Pantry Truth 🎥 Videos investigating American grocery and household products, ranked worst to best, with hidden ingredients and toxic additives exposed label by label 🎨 Written, voiced and produced by Pantry Truth 🔔 Subscribe now for weekly product investigations, hidden ingredient breakdowns, and worst-to-best rankings of the brands you already buy Watch More from Pantry Truth 🟢 / @PantryTruth 💼 Business Inquiries and Contact • For business inquiries, copyright matters or other inquiries please contact us at: [email protected] ❓ Copyright Questions • If you have any copyright questions or issues you can contact us at: [email protected] ⚠️ Copyright Disclaimers • We use images and content in accordance with the YouTube Fair Use copyright guidelines • Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act states: "Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright." • This video could contain certain copyrighted video clips, pictures, or photographs that were not specifically authorized to be used by the copyright holder(s), but which we believe in good faith are protected by federal law and the fair use doctrine for one or more of the reasons noted above.