Review: How Melatonin-Filled 'Lazy Cakes' Became the Subject of a Moral Panic
Senators asked for an investigation since the "sweet, chocolaty taste may encourage consumers to eat well over a recommended quantity of melatonin."

Lazy Cakes brownies promised "baked in" relaxation, thanks to a dose of melatonin. But they'd only been on store shelves for a few months in the early 2010s before becoming the subject of a moral panic about sleep-inducing baked goods.
"The inclusion of melatonin in baked goods raises numerous health concerns," Sen. Dick Durbin (D–Ill.) wrote to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in May 2011, asking the federal agency to launch an investigation because the "sweet, chocolaty taste may encourage consumers to eat well over a recommended quantity of melatonin."
Melatonin is widely and legally sold as a dietary supplement and natural sleep aid, and it has become more mainstream in the years since Lazy Cakes debuted. A single Lazy Cake contained about eight milligrams of melatonin; today, you can find 10-milligram melatonin pills almost anywhere health supplements are sold. Nevertheless, the FDA concluded that melatonin and brownies, though perfectly legal on their own, were somehow dangerous when mixed. The agency forced a label change.
As the FDA had its eye on the cakes, state and local officials in several jurisdictions went ahead and banned melatonin-infused products. A statewide ban of melatonin brownies, the Arkansas Department of Health declared, was necessary because the products could be especially dangerous to "young children"—even though "potential side effects associated with taking this hormone have not been fully determined."
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Lazy Cakes."
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Are they available in Delaware? If so maybe they explain our “energetic” president.
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Really? 2010?
Damn! They’re putting melatonin in our food to turn us all black?
“sweet, chocolaty taste may encourage consumers to eat well over a recommended quantity of melatonin.”
The Senators are just quoting ad-copy here.
Thanks for sharing
10mgs of melatonin is enough to knock you out for 10+ hours in a dreamless sleep and you’ll wake up feeling like you were hit in the head with a bat. soundcloud downloader tool
Ok, mom.
That has not been my experience. 10 mg seems about right for me to put me to sleep but wake up fine in 6-8 hours. I suppose it probably varies person to person.
If what you said was true, sales would be near zero.
Your mother’s right
She’s really up on things,
Before we married your mother served in the WACS in the phillipens
Yup. During ANTIFA BLM unrest in 2020 in our city, looting, arson, mobs blocking major roads, etc, I bought 2 large bottles of Melatonin 10 mg capsules at Costco. At best they induced sleep but was awake in 3 hours. Worthless medication. Trazodone works as needed. However, my husband buying me an AR-15 did the trick. Going to bed early works best for me.
And maybe on when you take it. Near normal bedtime, probably just makes it easier to get to sleep under stressful conditions. Take it when you wake up, probably just makes your morning really frustrating.
I suppose it probably varies person to person.
Personally, his conceptualization is BS. It’s not a sedative, it’s a sleep aid and it works much the way vitamins do. Moreover, much like vitamins, you have biochemical pathways that clear it rather rapidly (the half-life is 20-50 min.) So, if you hop yourself up on caffeine and/or condition yourself to stare at screens and focus at bedtime, you curtail melatonin production and it gets hard to fall asleep. You can simply stop doing those things and reestablish your sleep cycle, but exogenous melatonin is/can be a trigger to make it easier for you to, behaviorally re-initiate the cycle. It’s also going to hit you pretty hard because your body isn’t adapted to large amounts of melatonin. If your sleep cycle is already pretty regular, exogenous melatonin doesn’t do much similar to how, if you don’t have scurvy, vitamin C doesn’t do much of anything.
If you’ve been sleeping 4-5 hrs. a night for a month on end and you take 10 mg of it at pretty much any time, yes, it’s going to hit you like a ton of bricks. If you’ve been sleeping 9 hrs. a night with a couple 10 min. naps during the day, it won’t even phase you. It’s a circadian rhythm aid, not a sedative, it’s specifically meant to get the former person closer to the latter person’s cycle or to prevent the latter person from lapsing into the former person’s cycle. It can, selectively, put someone to sleep but, again, it’s not a sedative.
Now I had heard the WACS recruited old maids for the war
But mommy isn’t one of those
I’ve known her all these years
I’m not your doctor. I’m not denying your results or trying to diagnose you. I’m pointing out the pharmacokinetics. The conceptualization “Dose X produces effect Y.” is wrong. Melatonin isn’t a “go to sleep” switch and, being found in your body and in all kinds of foods well above physiological concentrations (including coffee), cannot be. It’s tightly regulated by light and there’s a circadian sweet spot called the dim-light melatonin onset point. Dosing incorrectly around this point has been demonstrated to have no or the opposite effect of producing sleep onset. So, it’s less of a “you sleep now” switch and more like the way they treat nitrous oxide in The Fast And The Furious where you have to time it right to get to the finish line without blowing the engine.
One-off 10 mg doses of melatonin both for myself and my teen son at virtually any time day or night have virtually zero effect. I absolutely concede those results aren’t typical. But, again, my point isn’t to say “dose X produces result Y”, but that “dose X at bed time is known to produce a result that it won’t necessarily produce at any other time.”
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