The 5-Second Rule Investigated
j-beda writes "Here is an interesting report on a student project about the 5-second rule: ' If You Drop It, Should You Eat It? Scientists Weigh In on the 5-Second Rule.' 'According to Clarke, a senior at the Chicago High School for Agricultural Sciences, the 5-second rule dates back to the time of Genghis Khan, who first determined how long it was safe for food to remain on a floor when dropped there. Khan had slightly lower standards, however; he specified 12 hours, more or less.' How long can you safely leave dropped food on the floor before picking it up to eat? You know you've always wanted to have the definitive answer ..."
The bold print giveth, and the fine print taketh away
I have a dog, four cats a wife two daughters and a niece. If it comes off the ground with more than 5 hairs or if a hair is more than 5 inches it's no good.
Speech: Free
Beer: $699.00
It depends on much more important factors than the cleanliness of the floor:
1) How hungry I am
2) How good the food is
3) How able I am to replace the food I dropped
Health be damned!
Taking samples of 1 square inch and monitoring it for microbes and spores? What a lousy experiment.
;)
What they should do is to hire 500 students to continually drop food and candy on the floor, pick it up again for consumption, and then monitor their well-being over the course of many weeks. Those wimps
That would explain this case of athlete's stomach...
There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
You had to be crude, but then you couldn't even do it right.
He's bragging that he's surrounded by all that pussy.
That way you include the cats.
I , for one, am outraged! the article stated that the E.coli bacteria transferred to the gummy bears in 5 seconds, but they didn't do any testing to see what the minimal time for safety was. how am i supposed to know how long that cookie is still good for?
Cogito Eggo Sum, I think therefore I'm a waffle
if you have e. coli on your floors the 5 second rule is the least of your worries.
The five second rule is stricted enforced around here. In fact, usually we don't even get all five seconds. Any dropped food instantly becomes property of the canine clean-up service, and they don't take kindly to "take-backs".
Or rather they do, but they look at you with puppy dog eyes and you're forced to drop the food again.
I just want to know how they get the floor to fit in the fryer.
Money for nothing, pix for free