Virginia Tech experts talk about food in the time of COVID-19
Recently, Virginia Tech used its speaker series, known as Tech on Tap, to delve into the pertinent topic of food and the novel coronavirus.
Recently, Virginia Tech used its speaker series, known as Tech on Tap, to delve into the pertinent topic of food and the novel coronavirus.
This Burger King ad campaign is nothing but calculated, scientifically incorrect fearmongering over perfectly safe preservatives.
Perhaps we should take a risk-based approach to Food Babe’s misinformation, which surely is hazardous, by reducing our exposure to zero.
Food bullying can take on many forms. It can happen on food labels, in ads, in conversations, and in posts and comments on social media.
Many food-safety issues could be prevented by radiation technology that was thoroughly researched in the 1950s but never widely applied.
As I was scrolling through Facebook the other day, I ran across a story that seems to get recycled year after year: a fast food burger and fries that someone has had sitting around for years, and miraculously, hasn’t spoiled. The explanation that follows is never one of reasoning and science, but one of fear […]
The CDC has issued a warning about particularly severe cases of salmonella that have been reported in 10 people across six states.
Resistant E. coli strains from meat — principally chicken, cattle, and animal slurry — were largely different to those infecting humans.
Certain sources will stop a biotech debate in its tracks, not because they carry scientific validity but because they are so laughable to be worthless.
Unchecked, unvalidated false expertise has at least temporarily devalued the real education and expertise of food regulators almost entirely.