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Curious Cases

2. The 5 Second Rule

Curious Cases

BBC

Technology, Science

4.84.1K Ratings

🗓️ 19 October 2024

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Would you eat food that fell on the floor? That’s the question Hannah and Dara are getting their teeth into this week as they put the so-called ‘5 second rule’ through its paces.

For some people it’s 3 seconds, and for others its 10 – especially if it involves a dropped ice cream and a screaming child. But microbiologist Don Schaffner says there’s no safe amount of time to leave food on the floor if you’re planning to eat it. And while you might think buttered toast would pick up the biggest number of bugs, it may surprise you to hear that wet foods like watermelon are actually the worst when it comes to attracting harmful bacteria. If all this is putting you off your dinner, the bad news is that the rest of your kitchen is also a microbiological minefield. Research shows nearly 70% of us keep our fridges are the wrong temperature, which sparks a lively discussion about whether it’s ever safe to reheat rice.

For home hygiene guru Sally Bloomfield it’s all a question of being a bit more clever about the kind of germs we expose ourselves to and weighing up risks.

Contributors:

Dr Don Schaffner: Rutgers University Dr Ellen Evans: Cardiff Metropolitan University Professor Sally Bloomfield: International Scientific Forum on Home Hygiene

Producer: Marijke Peters Executive Producer: Alexandra Feachem A BBC Studios Audio Production

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You are about to listen to a BBC podcast and I like to tell you a bit about what goes into making one.

0:06.0

I'm Siddhartha Cesset, an assistant commissioner of Podcasts for BBC Sounds.

0:11.0

I pull a lot of levers to support a diverse range of

0:13.7

podcasts on all sorts of subjects, relationships, identity, comedy, even one

0:18.9

that mixes poetry, music and inner city life. So one day I'll be helping host develop their ideas, the next

0:26.1

fact checking, a feature and the next looking at how a podcast connects with its

0:31.5

audience and maybe that's you so if you like this

0:34.6

podcast check out some others on BBC Sounds.

0:39.4

BBC Sounds music radio podcasts. You're about to listen to a brand new episode of Curious Cases. Shows are going to be

0:47.2

released weekly wherever you get your podcast, but if you're in the UK you can

0:51.2

listen to the latest episodes first on BBC Sounds.

0:54.3

I'm Hannah Fry and I'm Dara O'Brie and this is curious cases.

1:01.2

The show will we take your quirkiest questions, your cruncheest conundrums, and then we solve them.

1:05.5

With the power of science. I mean do we always solve them?

1:08.1

I mean the hit rate is pretty low. But it is with science.

1:11.8

It is with science. It is with science.

1:14.0

Darrowbrian.

1:17.0

Hana for it.

1:18.0

Where do you stand on eating food off floors?

1:19.0

I'll answer that.

1:20.0

But can we just dial it back slightly?

1:22.0

Sure.

...

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