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    foodpair
    food rules the class
    11-12-2020
    Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.introduction
    Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen Dear readers,

    we are students from a school in Belgium
    this blog that we make together is about food
    this is a class project

    we hope you like our blog (visit us whenever you want)

    greetings
    Shane, Gunnar and Alex

    11-12-2020 om 00:00 geschreven door 5ASO-SL  

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    Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.dead cookies
    Klik op de afbeelding om de link te volgen

    There's No Medical Reason Not to Bake Your Grandpa's Ashes into a Sugar Cookie and Eat It

    It appears that a high school student in Davis, California, baked her grandfather's ashes into sugar cookies and gave them out at school on Oct. 4. Yes, people ate them. And, yes, this is a real news story. It was reported in the Los Angeles Times. Apparently, some of the sugar-cookie-eaters knew about the ashes in the sugar cookies before they ate the sugar cookies. Again, this is a real news story.

    Sit with that for a moment.

    It's probably a pretty good guess that most folks would agree that baking a dead person's ashes into sugar cookies and then feeding those crematory confections to teenagers is a bad thing to do.

    It turns out that in some circumstances, this might not be much of a problem — at least in terms of making the cookie-eaters sick. (Whether it's an ethical problem is another issue.)

    "Cremation essentially mineralizes the human body and produces ashes that are rich in carbon and not much of a health concern," Halden said.

    So, the ash isn't toxic, and it's not like it would carry any diseases

    That doesn't mean there are no possible dangers.

    "The one potential concern worthy of consideration would be heavy metals, as can be found particularly in tooth fillings,"

    But even that probably wouldn't pose a problem, because those materials are often removed from the ashes after cremation, and also because you'd need to consume a lot of them for them to pose a significant danger.

    So, the verdict on eating sugar cookies with someone's grandfather's ashes in them from a purely health and safety perspective? It's probably no big deal.

    But one of the teenagers who ate one of the cookies told the Los Angeles Times that the ashes looked like "tiny gray flecks" and had a texture of sand "crunching in between your teeth."

    So, you know, maybe avoid that.

    posted by Shane

    Source: https://www.livescience.com/63870-ashes-sugar-cookie.html

    11-12-2020 om 00:00 geschreven door 5ASO-SL  

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