For example https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0165111088900152 …pic.twitter.com/O6eu2AEW7z
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I haven't even gotten to the best part yet: THIS IS A DAILY DOSEhttps://twitter.com/GidMK/status/981328016176328704 …
To get the amount of acrylamide FROM COFFEE that this court suggested is possibly a problem, you'd have to drink 500 cups a day I would humbly suggest that this is probably impossible
P.S. here's the source for those CDC figures. The important note is that it depends on which coffee brand you pick, but since I used one of the highest readings it doesn't make much difference anywayhttps://www.fda.gov/Food/FoodborneIllnessContaminants/ChemicalContaminants/ucm053549.htm …
P.P.S. the other important thing to remember is that acrylamide is found in most cooked starchy foods so you could potentially get dangerous amounts if you eat a lot of burned things but the claims from California are specifically about coffee not all food
P.P.P.S forgot to mention that coffee contains caffeine, which in doses of as little as 50 cups is enough to kill you so "probably impossible" is generous here
Final note: this thread doesn't talk about skin exposure to acrylamide, which is different. But unless people are rubbing thousands of cups of coffee on their skin each day, I reckon we're alright there too
That's how much I have before 10am
I'd heard that America is nuts but I didn't realize they had entire bathtubs full off coffee there
at which point, the alkaloids or kidney failure have probably already killed you
Drinking 500 cups of water everyday would also kill you...
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